The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 45, No. 44, Ed. 1 Wednesday, April 22, 1936 Page: 2 of 6
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' TWO
TWO
EL RENO (OK.) DAILY TRIBUNE
Edited By E. H. S.
Journalism Students
The E. H. S. Boomer
Published In Interest
of School Spirit
portrayed by T J Hands. Mary
Marshall, a 15-year-old neighbor, is
played by Ruth Reed, and Orlene
Robinson takes the part of Mrs,
Marshall, Mary’s mother.
YOU Mi: 2S
RENO HIGH SCHOOL, WEDNESDAY. APRIL 22, 1936.
NUMBER 31.
JUNIORS PLANNING
BENEFIT PICTURE
TWO» SENIORS ■ “’KfcESffih.
GIVEN HONORS 9ptcl>, „v„ ^
BOOMER STAFF
Editor—Evelyn Schuenemeyer.
Reporters—Max Brown, Cot'.one
Courtney, Ed Clark. Bruce Davis, __-----
.joan Davis. Wayne Entrekin. Vic- . , . , past week to both the first and sec
.,,,- Hackney, Dick Jensen. June Leonard Weyi’lCK And ond year Spanish classes, algebta
Kufzyn.--.ki. Helen KeUy. Paul^Ma-1 Vjctor Hackney Voted 'and general science departments
Helen Kelly, Paul Mo-
ron, Junnita Montgomery, Kath-
rvn McCann, Gordon Penney, Sam
Phillips, Ruth Reed, Myrtle Stur-
davant and Patricia Toler.
Outstanding Boys
In The Spring
Yo-Yo Craze Is Back Again To
Delight Or Disgust of General
Public: Gallia it llaun. Bucket*
Wright And Hugh Hollon Are
Star Performers
PM-rNROLMENT SUCCESS
At Ti l: THREE YEARS
Pro-enrolment is being taken
this week by the eighth ninth,
tenth and eleventh grades This
1 lan has been in use for the past
, wo years and has proved to be
r. bi, help for the students to
l ,aitc up their minds In regard to
dlffcicnt kinds of diplomas ann
subjects .
ryi i. classes receive instruct lor.
Jm vocational guidance prior to
their pre-enrolment Tills course
u:.-. them to gather some idea
a) it they are best fitted to do
hi lilc They also receive lnxtruc-
, i, , or. the four different kinds of
(i „|o-n. offered by the hlglisrhoo'
l u„ tiuie of graduation Fad'
iudctit is t’uided In his selection
*#r subjects which he is to take
’ car. The value and pu-pow
o cverv subject ottered 'n the
ldvlischool IK listed for the benefit
f’l the students planning tor pre-
enrolment.
Tin plan of pre-enrolment will
tnve much time and anxiety at
«),0 (me of enrolment at the br-
next year It eliminates
,11 those difficulties that used
tn r! every year
LOOK-OUT
Leonard Weyrick and Victor
Hackney were chosen by the sen-
ior class of El Reno highschool
(hiring the last week as the two
most outstanding boys In the class.
The eligibility of the contestants
was based largely on scholarship.
Through ail invitation of the
Men’s association at the University
of Oklahoma these boys will visit
the university at Norman Friday.
May 1. A dinner to which they
ere Invited as honor guests will
be given in the Memorial stu-
dent Union building Friday night.
During the dinner a plaque with
the name of the highschool that
these boys represent and the names
of the two boys engraved thereon
I Will be presented
The plaque is to be hung in the
highschool bt
a similar contest will be held and
two names will be Hdded.
The students voted by ballot on I
a list of boys who were eligible Marian Flecnor has her future
i.nd then the ballots were counted highschool record all figured out—
I lo determine the two who were the sohpomore. 36; Junior. ’38: senior,
mart nut standing 40; and graduate of ’40
Other candidates for the honor j --
w« re Lee Conrad. Marlon Hensley. _ , xl [1|nr
Ear! Yost. Even’ll Whltacre. Burl-
The tests were not issued by the
state educational system but merely
were given by the faculty at the i by JOAN DAVIS
suggestion of Superintendent Paul j "in the spring a young man’s
R Taylor in an effort to determine j fanry lightly turns lo thoughts of
steps to be taken in selecting ’he j iOVe" is the bit of philosophy that
curriculum for the 1936-37 school Lor(j Tennyson started so many
yeai. | years ago. But If Lord Tennyson
around today and had
Wc thought yo-yos were all the
go till Perdue. Betty Lee and Grab
blossomed out with bright red bal-
loon punch bags Speaking of yo-yos.
Oalbaits got one to match every
shirt.
were around today ana naa his
eyes open and his ears to the
ground he probably would be
ashamed of his bit of sentimentality
and change it to a more modern
version. Something like this, per-
haps: "In the spring a young man’s
fancy turns to thoughts of how
many tricks he can do with the yo-
yo.”
Because its here again. The craze
that swept the younger generation
oft Its feet a few seasons ago again
Plans are being made by the
| junior class to present “Les Mis-
I (.tables" at the Criterion theatre
soon.
Tile picture is based on Victor
sermon and tne commencement aa-VT _. , _ . n I Hi novel *>! 'll' ■*me n**°e
dress and the commencement exer- New r ITUS Being rre-|und features Frederic March. Rn-
...lit o a HiM.hrans pared For Present*!- I<l.sllr Hudson and Charles Laugh-
• Eff lO 1 t-011.
and C. K Reiff. superintendent of lion May \u The presentation is said to em-
, bools in Oklahoma City. - [body many beautiful sets showing
The baccalaureate sermon will be
Sunday. May 17. and the com-
SENIOR SPEAKERS
ARE ANNOUNCED
Speakers for the baccalaureate
sermon and the commencement ad
nd the commencement exer
cises will be Rev. R R Hildebrand. [
pa: tor of the First Christian church.
SENIOR PLAY
CAST CHOSEN
i.'encement exercises will be Thurs-
day May 21
Class night will be May 19 when
the awprds will be made.
The cast for the annual senior costumed groups,
play. ’New Fires,” a three-act! proceeds received from the show
will be
fund.
applied to the junior class
WHO’S WHO
Careful! That is
I motto He is getting
has put In Its appearance much to
Scott Murphy s,(hp dej|g|lt ,or disgust—if you take
dangerously
----------------- h that wav’ of tin- general public.
building and each year i careful, though He ^ was ant mg This not only applies to the mas-
I down main street reading a "Care-
ful Driving" book the other day.
cullne group, because like all
rest of the things the fellows do—
at least every other girl has been
seen sometime or other working the
little wooden devirr on a string. In
fact. It was Helen Kelly that start-
ed the yo-yo fever again, but "Gal-
bait" Haun steals the show with
Buckets ' Wright running a close
Who Is this blond haired senior
girl with a sweet personality?
She is a member of the Pepetts
pep club and the B. M C. literary
society.
Her outstanding art is that of
drawing and she is the only girl
In the El Reno highschool who is
er.roled in a mechanical drawing
class.
Besides these various activities,
the | she Is club and activity editor of
the "8entor Boomer."
She comes at the call of Rulhie.
comedy which is being presented in
the highschool auditorium May 12.
was chosen last week by E E. Brad-
ley. director of the play.
The plot Is concerned with a Chi-
cago family moving into the Ozark
mountains Stephen Santry. an au-
thor who is the father of the city
family, is played by Earl Yost His
| wife. Anne, is being portrayed by
i Barbara Gamble. Their children are
Bill. 15 years old. played by John
McRae; Phyllis. 16 years old. Char-
lotte Mae Irving; Olive. Louise
Stickley; Dick. Bob Monday; and
Eve. the daughter-in-law and wife
of Dick, is portrayed by Lillian
Canon ____
Lucinda Andrews, a widow who [
has lived in the country all her life I'roi* rattl Is Staged By
is played by Dorothy Shacklett; Su- i .. . 1
FUNDS COLLECTED
TO HOLD BANQUET
The junior class thus far has col-
lected 8140 from the annual class
plav. "Tiger House," presented Apr.
13
The money taken in was gross
receipts. The class still has some
money out to students for tickets
pnd also has a few bills to meet.
The proceeds will go for a junior-
senior banquet in May.
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 22, W**-
HI-Y CONDUCTS
ANNUAL OUTING
Annual picnic given by the Bast
chapter of Hi-Y was held Friday
evening east of El Reno on the Ca-
nadian river. , t ,
The outing, chaperoned by M L.
Bast, sponsor of the club, had as
special guests Mrs. M. L. Bast and
.son, Lowell, and Walter P. Marsh,
highschool principal.
Games were enjoyed by the group
after which a picnic lunch was
served.
Girls entertained included Mar-
garet Davis, Luella Haydon, Mary
Lee Finley, Margaret Porter, Helen
Kelly, Georgia Kathryn Smith,
Kathryn Barrett, Marian Fleener,
Minnie Lou Jones. Louise Whitney,
Freda Davis and Virginia Devitt.
Club members to attend were
Earl Yost. Loren Koerner. Robert
Sheets, Stanley Roberson, Bill
Dossey. Nelson Wright, Morris
Yowell, Lee Conrad, Bill Kelly,
Cortr Truax, ooe Wallace, Clarence
Pearce. Thomas Douglas and Bruce
Davis.
Juanita Montgomery. Lela Mor-
ris. Hazel Turner, Rov Schultz.
Harry Roberson and Hubert Abies
spent Sunday at Medicine Park.
Lloyd Wells and J. B.
were in Hinton Sunday.
Roush
Charlotte
Sunday.
Irving was in Yukon
Walter Ware spent last Wednes-
day in Fort Worth. Tex.
____ . The next time Kate. Joan ar.d----
Earl Yost. Everett Whitacie. Burl- . Oral) decide to serenade their third >econd when It eomes to playing
lynn Conner. William Haun. Pl"‘M llour biology class they're gonna be I with one of the little things
Mason and Otto Hess. 1 -- - t ... .
Miss Josephine Edwards visited
in Chlckasha at the home of her
parents over the week-end
zanne Toler, a spinster of 38 ior so)
Helen Bel Barnhart.
The part of Sid Sperry, hired
hand on the Santry farm, is being
taken by Harvey Slade; his 16-year-
old son. Jerry. Is William Haun.
Murline Adams takes the role of
Angie Sperry. Sid's wife
The part of Dr. Lynn Gray is
Edwards Home Room
M L. Bast's home room was en-
tertained by Miss Josephine Ed-
wards' home room last week
Barbara Gamble read a mystery
story, and th? group was led in
singing by Lillian Canon and Vir-
ginia Grabfelder.
—DANCE—
Veterans of Foreign Wars hall
. . . Thursday and Saturday
Nights. Gents 25c, Ladies free
Thursday only . . . Good Music.
ROUND-UP
Tlvmas Ashinhum spen’ the
vok-end In Oklahoma City and
Waurlka.
Paul Mason and Vtrtor Hackney
wiir Oklahoma City visitors Fri-
day and Saturday.
Doroihy Cupp. Mildred Von
Turn ‘In and Corrlne Courtney
were visitors at Klwante park In
Hinton Sunday.
June Kue7vn.ski and Jo Dean
Nowell were visitors In Oklahoma
Citv Thursday.
Among the Senior Day " visit-
o in Oklahoma City Friday were
Charlotte Irvtng. Vella Siler. Alta
Smith Bertha Smith, Mildred Von
Tingeln Dorothy Cupp. Letlia
Smith Jeanette Brown. Geraldine
S iv Anne Wetcher Ever-tt
Whltacre. Mildred Teague. Juanita
Montgomery, Walter Ware. Rose-
nwrv Downing. Lloyd Fuller lin-
den Yount. Russell Them and
fi nklin Pettit.
Reports Presented At
Home Room Meet
FRESHMEN RETAIN
BEST ATTENDANCE
Tile ninth grade with 97 43 had
lor the second lime this seawater
1 a higher percentage of daily at-
tendance than any other class Ut
tlie Junior and senior highschool
during the second six weeks of the
second semester. Other classes
I rank as follows:
Eighth glade 9738; seventh
grHtle. 95 64; and juniors, 95.57.
The seniors had the fewest
tardies of any Junior or senior
highschool class Their tardies to-
taled 69 while the ninth grade had
143 Other classes tardies were as
1 follows:
Juniors. 69; seventh grade. 77
Mi Tiliinghasl has been an ice-
man. football and basketball coach.
Juniors, seventh grade, rr. [ TSTAS?
eighth grade 87. and sophomores. pm ea.sk,n la tap datum*.
Hugh Hollon proves his versatil- 1
ity by driving his motorcycle with *
one hand and working a yo-yo with
the other
But alas! Just when everyone was
learning all the new tricks a bulle- |
tin came from the office declaring
that all yo-yos would be banished
forever from the school building |
Since then all the teachers have
garnered quite a collection and with j
contempt In our hearts we learn i
that they spend all their spare time I
[ learning to master the art Of throw-
If you care lo know Just exactly | )'>«< tie wooden bulls I
- To an onlooker the spinning a
wooden ball up and down on a j
string is pointless- but the thrill of I
mastering one of the pesky little j
things cannot be realized until it j
has been tried.
[ sure Mr Marsh ^n't there.
We didn't know Kate Redell be-
lieved In fortune tellers, but we find
, since she's had her fortune told
i she's taken It pretty seriously. Just
waiting for the "breaks to come
along.
Now that it's graduation time the
seniors are digging up their middle
names the battle cry is; "Oh, why
was I named?"
| when school will be out. ask Ollle
Estep and he'll tell you up to the
hour, minute and second.
190.
The ninth grade with 88 had a
higher percentage of perfect at-
tendance than any other class In
the Junior or senior yhighschyol
Other classes' perfect attendance
.•-core.s are:
Eighth grade. 85; seventh grade.
79; sophomores. 69; juniors. 45;
and seniors. 41
Post graduates' percentage of
dully attendance is 97 78 Tardies
1 numbered 1 and perfect dally at-
tendance is 2.
From all the rumors going around,
lie is pretty good
A special program was enjoyed by
Mis May Rhankltn's home room
Monday morning.
The program consisted of tnter-
cftlng reports by those who attend-
ee the Senior Day Program held
in Oklahoma City Friday
The reports were given by Bertha
Smith, packing town; Mabel Stroud.
I buiMnu:; and Walter
Ware, capital building
Now Books A (I Hod
To School Library
Desks Rofinishod With
\ssistance of Studonts
Under supervision of Marvin
C imp and Ridge Whitlock with
nance of manual training stu-
liinL the desks In Miss May
s’liankhn'x room have been varnish-
ed and reflnlshed
Any student found damaging
these desks will be charged with
mutilation of public property. It was
said.
The Ki Reno highschool library |
lias added lour new books, as fol-
lows :
"Carcajou," by Rutherford O I
Montgomery: "Vicar of Wakefield
by Oliver OoMsinlth. and Illustrat-
ed bv Arthur Rackham; "8outh of j
the Sunset." by Claire Warner
Churchill, a book concerning an In-
dian woman who led the lands and
Clark expedition; Whistlers Van,"
t.y Odwall Jones, a Gypsy story. Ail
Of these books except "Vicar of
Wakefield" are Junior Literary
guild books.
Hetty lan* Fields and Murline
Adams were week-end visitors In
Shnwnee.
N A Nichols, 520 South Rock
Island avenue, attended the an-
nual 'R9cr celebration at Outlirte
Wednesday.
Criterion
TODAY ONLY
('rased by torture . . . Till
they took the law into tlieir
own hands . . . to run riot
In the screen's most shock-
ing succession of thrills since
"I Am A Fugitive!"
“Road Gang"
Added—“OLGA KACHANOV V'
LATEST NEWS EVENTS
Criterion
PREVIEW SAT. NlfillT
Sunday - Monday - Tuesday
HE STANDS ALONE AS THE
GREATEST ENTERTAINER
OF MODERN TIMES!
9
1 vV
TOMORROW TIIIM SATURDAY
Alattnres 1:39 Slid 3:1*
Criterion
“I FELL IN LOVE WITH
MY HUSBAND!"
Married on a wild party.
Strangers the next day!
And then she fell in love with him!
But that's only the beginning of Kay
Brannan’s exciting romance! . -The
picture will keep you fascinated ...
even more than the famed Ben Ames
Williams' serial s/ory/
ROYAL
TODAY ONLY
Pistols harked drath . . .
hoofs thundered . . . and
three desperadoes made
their getaway with their
biggest haul! Thru out in
the blistering desert they
found themselves . . . with
a foundling infant on their
hands!
Peter B. Kyne’s
“Three
Godfathers'1
with
Chester Morris
Lewis Stone
Walter Brennan
Added — "OIVIM AIR"
i/oiif* piif/iiiP Youlhifivd fi lii/o-f/o«-trait •• •
Change (» this alloyed, different oil
CfflRLIEt
EMPRESS
TODAY AND THURSDAY
.Joan RIonHell
Glenda Farrel
Ross Alexander
“We’re In The
Money”
Added — “MIRACLE RIDFR”
COMING FRIDAY
Ken Maynard
r n*MI
C *4 AH IN
• MM# |
ilt’OI
Addrd—“Mil KEY MOl’SE"
•GRAND OPERA’
CONOCO
(1) Soon as your engine stops, the drain plugs out.
(2) Your "Any-Old” oil, that's all done for, drains like
watery ink. Back goes the plug.
(3) Germ Processed oil—correct grade on can—is un-
sealed and poured while you look.
(4) Alert Conoco man does all his stuff on your car and...
Before you realize it, you’ve quit driving by ear, or count-
ing your car’s birthdays. It's not your imagination—it’s
this alloyed oil. It Soothes and fortifies your engine
w ith a sturdier film-cushion than you ever heard of, hut
that’s not all!
Alloying also gives this patented Germ Processed oil
its uncanny ability to “join up” with metal. All the in-
ncr engine surfaces become definitely oil-plated. Even
those modern types othearings, easily corroded by some
oils, are double-guarded. For this alloyed oil is IN them,
and the Germ Processed film is ON them. You're just
that much farther away from your next stop for oil.
Continental Oil Company.
Adrift!—OUR GANG in "Lt'URY CORNER"
"THE LITTLE HTRANGER” — LATENT NEWS
HQY AL Tomorrow Thru Saturday
j Warner Bros! TerritynB ThrllUrl
TH. ##
WALKING ....
With RICARDO CORTEZ . EDMUND ■ ■ Bi MR Rl
« CWENN . MARGUERITE.CHURCHILL
Added — "MARINE FOLLIES" — SPORTW IN MEXICO
COMING SUNDAY
Zane Grey’s “Dessert Gold”
GERM PROCESSED OIL
Get Conoco Bronze Gasoline And Ger m Processed Motor Oils At
HENRY SCHAFER OIL COMPANY
I Company I
\£/
Two Stationa—Corners Choctaw and Sunset Drive
TelcphoneH 184-185-190
1 in receiving treatment 9t the ki I try. Alien u iiusuwuu wuu mMivsnw \i«u wu«< •■<*«
___lihuL LiiL-ic is something wrong JnImovrO
1 viftd*tk t iLdsa lkeni
uk...
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Dyer, Ray J. The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 45, No. 44, Ed. 1 Wednesday, April 22, 1936, newspaper, April 22, 1936; El Reno, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc919124/m1/2/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.