The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 38, No. 101, Ed. 1 Monday, February 3, 1930 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.
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PAGE FOUR
THE EL RENO DAILY TRIBUNE
MONDAY, FEBRUARY 3,1931
THE EL RENO DAILY TRIBUNE
Successor to The El Reno Dally Democrat and The Peoples Press
DAVIS 0. VANDIVIBR
J. R. BLAIR......
Publisher and General Manager
Managing lulTTor
Published dally except S unday by T,ie hi Rene 1 ruitlns nnd » ubl™1 R
Company at 207 South Rock hluml avenue, h\ Reno. Oklahoma, hnter
ex] a* second class mall under Act of March 3. lrfiJ. _
LON DOM CONFERENCE
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
In El Reno, by carrier—per month In Canadian and adjoining conn-
45 cents; three months $1.25; six tics, per year
months $2.50; one year $4.00. $4.00.
$2.50; elsewhere,
full news report of united press
ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVES: FraHck, B iVMjrt, Inc.,
270 Madison Ave., Now York; 605 Michigan Avo., Chicago; ban Huu-
cisco; Los Angeles.
By C.LWebb
©1929
"POPULAR” MAGAZINES
A lot of fuss is be in if raised lately by several nienilurs o!
the United States Congress over the “CussinrT which Mr, i
William K. Henderson, of Shreveport, La., is doing over his |
radio broadcasting station, KV\KH. Probably these proles- i
tations are entirely justifiable, as some oj the words which
Mr. Henderson has been sending out over the air to thous-
ands of homes are not proper for children to hear.
But why pick on Mr. Henderson! If our esteemed states-
men will take a few minutes time to glance through a score
of our so-called popular magazines of today, whose principal
readers are young people, they will see and read things that
will make Mr. Henderson resemble an angel. Much of the
“best seller’ fiction, also, is unfit ior adults to read, much
less young people.
Mr. Henderson is striving to make his station an unusual
one, as compared to the average station. In so doing, he
possibly has gone too far in the selection of his characteristic
language, but “doggone ya” why not clean up some of these
dirty publications while making Mr, Henderson <piit cussin .
<&> .4. ii> <%•
Only !I52 auto, truck and tractor lays lor I!).'it) were is-
sued in’ Canadian county ilurinjr January. Most auto owners
appear to In- intent on musing their tajr money as low* as
possible, l- ithei that, or they are still searching for it. How-
ever, if all wait until February 2K to procure their 1ujr. a
jrreat many will be eauylit in the rush and forced to let their
ear stand in the jjararte a few days until they are able to get
their license tag.
(f ',4>
Your town boosts you. Why not do as well by the town
as it does by you? No citizen is so powerful none so humble,
but what the town is aid to him in some wav or other. W hen
a IVIlow boosts his own town he docs not slop there. He is
pcrfoimingan act that improves his own condition, for every
good word and «very good deed has its elevating influence,
—Lawton Constitution.
\
FP;
PEACE PROBIEmJ
-flSS?
» »
NAVAL WRIT]
QUESTION'
III ' •
READ Til IE FI RET:
Herbert Maxwell, guardian of Pa-
tricia and Jimmy Blair, fudm and
joint heirs to an immense fortune,
succeeds In making away with half
of their estate through the substitu-
tion of a fake for Jimmy at the set-
tlement of the estate at Few York
City. Maxwell is holding the real
Jimmy, a victim of aphasia due to
shell shock, in seclusion. Lieutenant
Rex Mallard, Dr. Frank Gordon, both
in love with Patricia, and Nurse Mar-
gery Lynne, her girl Irland, have at-
tempted to frustrate the plot, but
fail. Maxwell removes the proceeds
of his plot from the bank in which
they were held, to his private safety
deposit box.
(NOW GO ON WITH TIIF STORY)
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K
This is a good cow country there is no doubt about that,
but it has no cows. Win net get up a bond issue to buy 100.-
000 cows to stock the country? We have bond issues for
every other purpose, why not have one for something that
will do some real good? A ft on American.
The American people are said to be very forgetful, but
Reminiscing
Items Reproduced From
the Daily Democrat
of 20 Years Ago
GIRL PILOT HAS A LICENSE
1 RUT SHE CAN’T LAND A
JOB
KANSAS PITY. Mo. Feb.3 (IP> H spectators wished to I'lv with “that
is all very nice to he one of the lew women pilot. Notwithstanding
women in the United States with a these scattering requests it was
transport pilots license hut about her opinion that most people are
___ the only place for it is in a frame afraid of women pilots.
-- |on the wail, one Kansas City miss “The only refusal I ever heard
The Indications are that the hop has come to realize. i was a long time ago from a police-
lobe given in .Inckson Hall tom- ^lm is Miss M lift red Kauffman, man," she said. That was here, and
oirow nlfehl by the El Reno concert' 2i.Venr*(dd uvlatrix, who literally | someone suggested he ride with
Land will he attended hv a record- "marcelled and luussaKccTher way me. ‘No sire. I doin go up with
ing crowd. A large mini her of tick-1 through flying school. And now any woman, he said,
thev rill alwavs recoiled thu deductions to be made from their ots have been disposed of and an tluit she has the coveted award Neither does Mins Kauffman aug*
iluiir |.,v ivtimw— t hicknsha Exnrew (M«ua,ly lar,u' timber of dancing which shows that she possesses Kt*t to the woman-adventurer that
income OTI then tax returns. K ■ I ... Vnh III' nAnnln have signified their more thun 200 hourtjn the ait aipl sit,, K< 1 l flying as the waj to‘let
Is capable of bundling a L^Wert off ..steam" Flylpg, Miss Kauff-
airplane she finds that superstition man declared, “is a business and
That V Ron is expanding is evi- nn,i tradition are keeping her from there is no place for anyone who
dent by the fact that Mrs. Kirkpn- getting a Job. merely wishes to use it as a recre-
trick of that place has platted and Tbe jjct)Ube Hile iH certain, Is no ation or snort. Women especially
“I hcllove tho tlm. 1. rl,.o for real. I "f s" ««'• 1,1 'mvn mmidu to « Job an a ramilar pilot should be . tireful pllota.Bhe assert-
effective enforcement and 1 shall co. Ami two or tin........... nddllions „„ „ lrllllH|,ort nnc. «d. for pilots and Instructors are
operate fully with the president t. have been laid out Into lots | ..................... ... .. -1 far more critical of women who
that end," said Senator Robert F. during the ! tint week.
F. E.‘Rickey has returned from as passenger plane pilots, of course.
and Probably they never will, any more Gif the flying Held, dressed m
i limn a railroad would hire them as a house apron with her blond, bob-
| engineers or bus companies as dri- bed hair cut conservatively short
vers. But already several women she looks more dike any tvhoolKirl.
making successes as demon- Bhc really is tlint, having gone into
young people have signified
l intention of attending.
By CHARLES P. STEWART
Central Press Staff Writer
TIT A SUING TON, l). C.-
VV Members of the wet bloc in
congress would applaud a billion
dollar appropriation fur prohibi-
tion enforcement. Or more. The
bigger tho appropriation the hap-
pier the wets will be. A niggardly
little appropriation, like the $15,-
000,000 suggested by Dry Com-
missioner Doran is what will
make the wets look sour.
Ot course the drys want no such
plethora of
money as the
wets would he
glad to wish onto
them. Ah wo
know, however,
they do want en-
forcement .stirr-
c n e tl consider-
ably.
This, too, is nil
right with the
wets. They favor
all the stiffening
that can ho put
Into dry laws. On
tho contrary,
t h e y aid op.
I- • i to
modification calculated to make mere
misdemeanors out of n certain class
rf Volstead act violations which now
go Into the felony category.
• * *
YV7ET policy on Capitol hill has
W undergone a complete transfor-
mation in recent weeks.
Formerly the wets' Idea wan to
hamper the drys as much as possible,
which was not much, the drys having
l>ecn in an overwhelming majority
for tho last 10 years. Today wet
strategy is to urge dry legislation
and appropriations to extremes, If
it can l»o done, with tho deliberate
object of giving tho couutry u surfeit
of prohibition.
Wagner of New York a few days ago.
Senator Wagner Is a wringing wet
from Manhattan Island.
Senator
,R. F. Wagner.
rT,UE New Yorker’s remark may he
* freely Interpreted as meaning
that he does not believe tho least
possibility exists of prohibition's ac-
tual enforcement; ho does wont to
compel tho government to put forth
every ounce of effort it Is capable of,
in an attempt to enforce It—con-
vinced that it will fail and thus un-
mistakably reveal its Impotency.
It is not altogether a new wet
method of lighting. Senator Bruce
of Muryl ind and Representative La-
Guurdia of New York did their ut-
most in tlie two houses of congress u
year ago for a $300,000,000 dry ap-
propriation—and dry votes were re-
quired to boat them.
Nevertheless it is a wet method
which has won converts of lute;
whenever a dry lawmaker needs help
today to put through an extremo dry
measure — ns, for example, Senator
Sheppard's lull to make liquor buy-
ers mi guilty as bootleggers—he can
get it from wet sources.
a busino.sK trip in various cities
towns in Texas.
George P. Ward went to Enid
iliiu morning to look after u real es-
tate deal.
are
st i lit in v pilots mid saleswomen for aviation a year after her graduation
planes or accessories." from Pasen Mali school here la as
Miss Kauffman is a reserve pi
lot for Hie American Eagle Aircra
hall th^ evening to memoers arm (.ori)orat|on She curled hair, gave facial mass-
IlH'ir families. The ,-nU rtalnineiit ^ l(mk hor p|nno „KE8 ami did the work of the beauty
no a goodwill night from here to shop a year, saving her money.
Hie I’aelfh Count. Knrottte she Then she enrolled In a flying
made many stops and frequently course.
The Knights of (Yihimbus will give
a post Lenten eaid party at their
hull tills evening to members tintl
matter-of-fact a manner as she wor-
ked in her sister s bounty shop.
She curled hair, gave facial mass
was first scheduled for tomorrow
night I ul owing to the fact that it
would interfere with the attraction
at the El Rene theatre, II will be
held tonight.
F.lI. Wright left last night for Ka
usas City on u business trip.
♦
Gophers’ New Coach?
1
"’HE truth is (though not many
wets will admit It) that wot stra-
tegists feared, earlier In prohibition's
history, that a 100 per cent enforce-
ment campaign really would dry up
tho country, and shrank from en-
couraging what they thought might
rob them of their stock argument
concerning tho prevalence of Vol-
stead violations.
The present wet bloc has the cour-
age (according to Its own account)
of Its convictions; tho courage of
despair according to dry proponents.
At all events, tho wets are ready
for a genuine show-dpwn.
Their complaint now Is that tbs
drys ore trying to sidestep 1L
5^5® /OtfDVE
sfly
DEAR NOAH* Tou OLD
COOKIE, ANSWER 7HIS-
You Boil, an and
it Becomes hard, yoo
SOIL A POTATO and IT
BECOMES SOFT-WHY?
5AKAH THOMPSON
^HACKENSACK NX
DEAR
NOAH« IF 008 WHITE WENT
ON A LARK,AND KATYDID
TAKE A SWALLOW, WOULD
XOl) WHIP-POOR WILL?
floss mary Everett
QEACMC*jr
TO DEAR OuD NOAM \
AlG?l<fcHT uaut -
VOu fAN *5ToP NOk)
VWUE PQAcTiCEO
VOo(? LESSON i»
oue.0. AM
HOOfc-
fxw wexte.
CAMT l
Fri.Q,UTiCC_
Minutes
LONfrCO.?
C‘ MoM
ifetp TMft-
m % tees
Elton E. "Tad" Wicman, former
University of Michigan head foot-
ball coach, is expected to succeed
Dr. Clarence W. Spears ns grid
coach at the University of Min-
nesota.
— - '
Hugo Publisher
Makes Ilis Money
Go A Long Way
nnio, okiii. I’l'h. s. op) w.
E. Schooler, publisher of tin* Hugo
Dally NowS, believe« that a little
money will go a long ways In pay-
ing debts.
To prove his contention, he pre-
pared a neatly engraved check that
will pay 25 debts and then be
cashed for $5.
The check will bu made out to
a portion to whom $5 is duo. The
receiver will endorse the ch<! k
and turn It over to* his creditor
and receive $5 credit. Tills pro-
jeess will he continued until 25 en-1
dorsementi are obtained and then |
i the check will ho honored at the i
hunk.
The check Is like any other hank
I check except a notation stipulates 1
j that to bo cashed 25 endorsements ;
niust have been obtained, ,
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IS
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CHAPTER 31
I1ROUGHOUT tho whole of tho
haranguo the man addressed os
Foxwcll never onco looked up from
tho occupation of stowing away in the
box assigned him the securities he
took from the black hag. Two of
these ho placed in his pocket. The
rest all went into the box. With the
last one disposed of he closed the
box, locked it and dropped tho key
in his pocket. Foxwcll straightened
up, his gaze fastened on tho young
Mr. Clark.
"I got ten thousand here for you
to open an account with up stairs, '
said the older man in a voice that
tinkled like an Icicle. “When I'm
through with you I’ll give you what
you've got coining. But I need you
for awhile yet If I settled with you
now you'd bo gone like a summer's
dream by tomorrow night and I
never would see you again! So I’m
keeping you tied in tho ono way
you'll stay tied! In the meantime—"
Ho paused. No change marked tho
expanse of expressionless face. But
when ho spoke again the smooth,
suavo voice held a note as menac-
ing as the hiss of a snake. “Don’t
forget," ho said slowly, distinctly,
"that a certain chap who was known
in Paris us Jean Bouchard Is still
badly wanted there for the killing of
a French lieutenant! And they cut
your head off in France for murder!
Do you still Insist upon that box for
yourself?"
It was illustrative of his own iron
nerve that the other made no an-
swer for a moment Neither did he
exhibit any indication of fear or nerv-
ousness. He just stood looking down
at his feet, pondering the situation,
evidently. Finally he looked up, a
short, mirthless little laugh escap-
ing his lips.
"You win," she said briefly. “Let’s
go!"—
Again the car drew up at the curb
and stopped, this time before a ejgar
store in Upper Broadway, near 42nd
street Again the two men, "Mr. Fox-
well" and Mr. Clark" stepped out
upon the sidewalk. Mr. Foxwell had
left the black bag on the floor inside
tho car. Ho was less careful of It
now that it no longer contained the
huge fortune taken from a shell-
shocked. helpless young aviator and
his scarcely less helpless sister.
“I want to see you early this eve-
ning, Jim. Please stop at my door at
eight o'clock, sharp!" Tho pale blue
eyes of the older man looked into the
dark brown ones for a fleeting second
as the two stood for a moment on
the sidewalk. The voico waa soft nnd
smooth, but the eyes were as hard
and cold as ice.
Tho young man nodded.
"I have some telephoning to do
and a llttlo trip to make," went on
the suave voice. "And remember,"
came tho additional instructions,
"stick close about your room. Don’t
go prowling around in public places
where you're liable to be seen by
some French dick or some old friend
of Jimmy Blair!"
Again the young man nodded. Tills
time tho nod was accompaincd by
a sly grin. Old Maxwell’s allusions
to French detectives didn't worry
this Jim particularly. Besides, he
understood tho real purpose of the
Si
/ \
V
"1 got ten thousand here."
other’s extreme caution. It was the
Blair resemblance and tho possibility
of someone recognizing him aa
Jimmy.
"Well, watch yotrr step!" cautioned
the careful Mr. Foxwcll again for
good measure and turning he walked
with ponderous dignity across to the
door of the cigar storo. Entering
he made his way on through to the
back of the placo and into ono of the
three vacant telephone booths.
Closing the door carefully he
dropped a nickle in the slot and took
down the receiver. The reward of
Instant service was his and he smiled
ns ho read off the telephone numbers
from a card he had drawn from a
vest pocket He smiled again as the
voico of the operator's carefully
enunciated repeat came to his ear
from out of the funny little hole in
tho trumpet He was always oddly
amused at the vastly mysterious sim-
plicity of the telephone. It was an
important transaction for which this
call was being made and he set him-
self to wait with as much patience
as poslble. But his wait was brief.
"Hello!" The disagreeably harsh
tones struck on his car-pan with a
sudden, sharp raspiness that hurt.
There was no mistaking that voice.
Margery Lynn would have recognized
it instantly had she been standing in
Foxwcll’s place. Even the latter
winced at tho sound, a faint expres-
sion of disgust showing In tho curl
of his thin lips. His response was
shot back in short, snappy rebuttal.
"Fete—get this!" He began with-
out any preface. Tho man at the
other end of the wire knew his voice.
Io continued: "I’m gonna tako the
nut for a ride! Bring 'im over to
60—Broadway, tho cigar store, right
away! Hire a tight-closed taxi! Get
me?"
"I get you!" came the gruff reply.
"Be there in thirty minutes 1 That
all?"
•That's all," went back tho answer,
and Mr. Foxwell hung up tho re-
rceclver, opened the booth door and
strolled leisurely along the show case
where he paused. With the eye of a
connoisseur ho Hooked over the
stock, selected six of a special brand
at fifty cents each and carefully
placed them in his case. Then he
lit a cigarct. bought a newspaper
from the stand up front and set him-
self to wait for the arrival of the
"nut."
At the expiration of fifteen minutes
he went out nnd climbed into his
car. The chauffeur, in his comfort-
ably cushioned seat under the steer-
ing-wheel, glanced back at his em-
ployer, a faintly inquiring look or
face.
“Waiting for a party," said
Foxwell briefly in answer to the I
Once again his wait was te
nated sooner than expected. He
scarcely settled himself, after li
ing one of tho cigars, when a L
limousine taxi halted at the aid
his car. He looked across the ii
vening three feet between the
cars, saw the ugly face of his i
Fete, turned toward him in the
ousine's open doorway and op
the door of his own car.
A moment later Pete, with a 1
under each shoulder, had halfjil
half-pushed his companion, a y
man with sleepy brown eyes,
tho luxurious interior of the «
car. Here the "nut” was receiv
Mr. Foxwell, who lost no time in
ting his guest comfortably plac
a corner of the back seat The
turned to Pete, standing on the
ning-board as if expecting t
asked inside.
"Bo in John’s tomorow at four
said shortly. "I got somo wori
you; wont need you any mor
day!"
As Pete stepped down Fo
jerked the car’s heavy door
and motioned to the chauffeur,
expressionless face turned to;
him.
"Drive out to Mount Vernon, 1
he said and then settled himself
in his scat, after a quick, spccul.
glance at tho young man In the
nor.
The beautiful maroon-colored
cased its costly body into the b
going traffic of Upper Broad
drifting along with tho tide
movement of vehicles, cars big
small, high-priced and cheap;
of the most modern make and
ancient and decrepit, a hetcrc
cous aggregation of toys bud
wheels, all going somewhere,
where, no matter where, but a
their way.
A yellow taxicab with two
passengers slipped into an open .*
alongside the big inaroon-t
beauty. One of the passengers, g
ing out through the taxi's £
window, looked on through the
opposite and straight into the
blue eyes of "Mr. Foxwell."
gaze flicked past the Cat head f(
instant and fastened on the b
face of the young man in the c»,
scaL He stiffened. Then the
car slipped out of the jam inti
dear just ahead. The pass*
turned swiftly to his compani
(TO BE CONTINUED)
—efr—
—Vd—
THE
QUESTION BOX
CENTRAL PRESS
WASHINGTON BUREAU
ACROSS
I Flaps
r> A notion
9 A narrow strip
of woven fabric
II A vehicle
15 A unit of germ
pbsm
38 To walk a short
distance
40 A tree
41 To arrange •
43 To relutc
44 In the year of our io Black
Lord (ahbr.) 11 Male cats
45 Idle talk
5 A flower
6 a parent
7 Printer's measure
8 A flat circular piece
of material
15 Something In con- 47 Right reverend
donned form
17 rreflx meaning
apart
18 Turf
20 Jnclosurcs under
1 a roof
21 An American poet
22 Makes a noise like
1 a dove
24 Numbers (abhr.)
25 Kvdamktlon of
1 sorrow
26 Devastation
28 A celestial body
29 To tattle
30 A satellite rcvrlv
Ing around ary
planet
51 Above
55 A small duck-hi^ ygglPffl
bird [ v
55 The one spots at |0£
cards
16 A yegetable f*-
(ahbr.)
48 A color \
49 To keep
01 Youths
5? A bird habitation
DOWN
2 Near
t A nocturnal flying
mamma)
12 Insects
14 An entrnneeway
16 Booty
17 To fly aloft
19 An unbeliever
21 Opaque bodies of
the solar system
23 Storage houses for
grain
25 Smallest possible
particles
27 A short sleep
4 To engage In boxing 28 A distress signal
wor to 31 Sour
Prqvictis Puzzle
32 Edible animal flesh
34 To don
35 Distant
36 To make sport
37 Parte of a play
39 A burning pile
41 President (abbr.)
42 Ardor
45 To peer Into «
46 First woman Q>|
48 To proceed
50 Plural verb ending
lAnswuiM to questions of informa-
tion and fact can be obtained by
writing to Central Press Bureau,
p. O. Box 126. Washington, D. C.,
nnd enclosing a self-addressed,
stamped envelope. No answers will
he given to marital, medical or legal
questions. 1
IS unswer to J. E. T., members ot
1 the United States senate wiio have
previously served as governor in
their respective states arc: Joseph
T. Robinson. Arkansas; Hiram W.
Johnson, California; Hiram Bingham,
Connecticut; John G. Townsend, jf\
Delaware; I’ark Trammell, Florida;
Charles S. Der.eon, Illinois; Arthur
Capper, Kansas; Henry J. Allon,
Kansas; Phillips L. Goldsborough,
Maryland; Davll T. Walsh, Massa-
chusetts; Tasker L. Oddie, Nevada;
Henry \V. Keyes, New Hampshire;
Lynn J. Frazier, North Dakota; Cole-
man L. Blease, South Carolina;
Peter Norbeck, South Dakota; Will-
iam II. Mi Master, South Dukota;
auspices, hut part is for military
purposes. Representative R. A. Col.
lins of Mississippi, a leading reduc-
tion advocate, calls the bill "a tragic
disappointment."
Largely Legendary
What were tho dates of Homer's
birth and death?
Homer, traditionally the author of
the Iliad and Odyssey, Is supposed
to have flourished about the Ninth
century B. C., but it is fur from cer-
tain that such on individual ever
really lived, to say nothing of the
lack of definite information concern-
ing his birth and death dates.
Tho Only Stephen
What president was named Ste-
phen?
Grover Cleveland was christened
"Stephen Grover," nfter the Rev.
Stephen Grover, who had preceded
tho future president's father, the
Rev. Richard F. Cleveland, as Pres-
No chance f<
mayonnaise t
arate ij you a
oil
a littl
O
:j
Ulauile A. Swanaon, Vireinin. Henry bytorlan pastor at Caldwell (N J ).
I). Hat field, Wost Virginia; John J. (tho youmror ClovoUnda blrthplwa.
Blaine, Wisconsin; John 13. Km- The latter subsequently dnmtd th.
drink, Wyoming. Senators Robin-‘drat of Ida two baptismal names,
son and Bingham, Lt perhaps should
bo udded, resigned only a few days
after their respective gubernatorial
inaugurations, to
posts.
Still Doubtful
Hus President Hoover carried hla
point In favor of army reduction?
The senate has not yet acted on
next year’s army plana, but tho rep-
resen tat Ives have passed a $155,000,-
000 financial allowance, or consider-
ably more than the last ono. Part of
the proposed Increase is for civil Im-
provements to be made under army
Popularity of Olio ,
Does the government offer any rx-
sccept scnuU pianatlon over tho Increasing de-
mand noted by the dairy publications
of oleomargarine In preference to
butter?
Not tlio government. However,
Sena or Wagner of New Ym£, who
also !iuh observed tho tendency men-
tioned, says: “It shows that many
families are shifting from a compar-
atively expensive to a cheaper food
staph. Such a lowering of standards
does not take plate uu.ept uu a mat-
ter of necessity." __ i
No chanck for Hills Hroi
Coffee to vary in flavor be
cau*e it is roasted a few
pounds at a time by the con-
tinuous process — Controlled
Roasting. No bulk-roasting
method can produce inch
flavor!
Fresh from the original ft
pack. Lastly opened with th
HILLS
BROS
COFFEE
01930
Through Error t
SQUARE DEA
BATTERY COJ
Was Omitted from
Telephone Directo
The number is 8.
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Blair, James R. The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 38, No. 101, Ed. 1 Monday, February 3, 1930, newspaper, February 3, 1930; El Reno, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc919524/m1/4/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.