The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 50, No. 307, Ed. 1 Wednesday, February 25, 1942 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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FOUR
EL RENO (OKLA.) DAILY TKIDUjNE
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1942
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The El Reno Daily Tribune
A Blue Ribbon Newspaper Serving a Blue Ribbon Community
Issued daily except Saturday from 207 South Rock Island avenuo,
and entered as second-class mail matter under the act of March 3, 1879.
RAY J. DYER
Editor and Publisher
BUDGE IIA It I.F
News Editor
DEAN WARD
Advertising Manager
Capitol
Notebook
By John Owen
Associated Press Correspondent
THE WAR TO DATE'
The ASSOCIATED PRESS is exclusively entitled to the use of re
publication of all the news dispatches credited to it or not credited by
this paper, and also to all the local news therein.
All rights of publication of special dispatches herein also are reserved.
_ /OKLAHOMA CITY, Feb. 25 '/P>
- u
MEMBER
SOUTHERN NEWSPAPER <sf
PUBLISHERS ASS’N.
;»u •
MEMBER
OKLAHOMA T.SESS
ASSOCIATION
'Alfalfa Bill" Murray was stop-
ped at the door by the Capitol
guards but they won't any more,
for it’s too muen to ask of the
constabulary to face th full
force of his vocabulary.
The ex-chlef of stntc with h's i
old battered hat carried nary n I
bomb but they didn't know tli.l
so a guaurd who eyes pnkftgfs j
to thp place inquired j
DAILY SUBSCRIPTION RATES BY MAIL IN CANADIAN AND
BY CARRIER ADJOINING COUNTIES
One Week_______________I .15 Three Months__________11.50 I brought
rhree Months ______________$1.75 Six Months______________$3 00 about things In the Murray suit
One Year_______!______$7.00 One Y°ar____________$5.00
Including Sales Tax
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1942
FOLLOW DIRECTIONS OK YOU NEVER WILL ARRIVE: Be
ye doers of the word, and not bearers only, deluding your own selves.
—James 1:22.
They Have Forgotten Pearl Harbor
raw*.
"It's none of your business," |
roared Bill. In addition, he touch-
ed up thp words in the Murray j
tradition. Then. Jerking the hnt
lower over one eye. he swept part I
the guard who stood helplessly, i
by.
No communist, anarchist, criminal
he. the governor added, "You fel-
lows know me."
The bag, we might say to the I
man at the door, held a cargo of |
books—nnd nobody is sore.
t- * tf
IVASHINGTON had his sunshine patriots anti Lincoln his
copperheads. Today we have it new and equally obnox-
ious breed—false front patriots. They erect with lond talk
and a great fan-fare of activity a magnificent structure of fPHE story siuend swiftly along
patriotism. But it falls flat with the first stiff breeze be- *■ the statehouse grapevine fast-
cause it has a false front. | est in the st°te outsld<> p™1'
Specifically the* hi* talker, and arntdl doer, noMly I “g 7„TV“= .ITS
buy defense bonds nnd stumps one dny cind veiy (juietlN dropped in on the jireusroom nnd
cash them the next. Obviously this sort of thing is about as WW1 n.sictcj ai,out it.
helpful to our war effort as is Hermann Goering.
* * *
He dldh’t blame the guard, who
is under wartime orders. He did |
not criticize the system. His atti-
tude was that he is well enough
known that they needn’t waste
JT'OR instance, the Cleveland postoffice reported defense
* stamp sales of $274,003 one week but it gave back
$75,900 to persons who did not wish to keep these stamps I ume"'.sear<d»ing”hta
or trade them in on defense bonds. This was a net sell-out * * *
of Uncle Sam, General MacArthur, Admiral Nimitz, the i YCCOMI>ANIKn bv faithful cld
thousands in front line fighting and the millions on the Jim Noble, nrdro capitoi fixture
home front of 27 percent. whose day is complete only when
Reports of such redemptions, some more and some less, KUV ner ctl°PK in
come from other sections of the nation and piled up to a fftdvL.shwatn Tims* t IT
total of $6,646,712 stamp redemptions in December. That ous vo<>al (.„orcts slentorlHn ton,B
is enough money to equip a fleet of flying fortresses and ringing along ihc corridors
slap the Japs with a punch their honorable ancestors would Hearing failing, but
hear.
Some of these stamps undoubtedly were redeemed in
bonds. Some persons were forced to cash them because they
lost their jobs or suffered other financial jolts. Neverthe- j economics touches the past and
tbfi norrontaurn rpmainu inn biirli if wn urn irnimr in bores into the future. Ati unofficial
Farm News
and Views
Speech Returned
By Fast Express
i
NORMAN. Feb. 25 —(Special)—
By Associated Press
i Joseph- A. Brandt, Universiay of
| Oklahoma president, had to ship
OTILLWATER. Feb. 25 — i/Pi — his speech 140 miles by fast ekpiess
Home demonstration club wo- to extend greetings to Oklahoma
men about Fnid are doing their a. and M. college for the recant
part in building and maintaining <13ftlutc tQ A and M... broadcast
morale at home, according to Fay „ ,, , ., ,. ,
McKemy, Garfield county extension frw» the university radio station,
agent. First HMk in the program de-
velcped when Brandt learned lie
was to be in Tulsa at the time of the
broadcast. Station officials dc dried
to record the talk before Brandt
left. But University affairs occu-
pied Brandt’s time until he had to
leave for Tulsa.
However, on his way he jolted
clown his speech and upon arriving
gazlnps' Ybrarv' "books'”waste "paper to “ rutea ''"t,on Jh'rf
greetings were recorded. Tlie record
was shipped back to Norman In
time for the radio station writers
These club women are responsible
for 30 dozen cookies two Saturdays
of eacli month for the entire year,
and these cookies are served to sold-
iers at the new soldiers' recreational
center in Enid.
NoL only are tlve women making
bushels of cookies, but they are co-
operating further by providing ma-
baskets, picture frames and tables.
* * *
‘A
TROWEL, a spading fork or
shovel, a rake and a hoe are
| the essential implements necessary
■ for producing a small home garden."
| says F. A. Romshe, horticulturist at
j Oklahoma A. and M. college.
Ho suggests that the gardener buy
i good equipment.
"If you spend a little more money
In the first place for your equip-
ment, you are economizing in the
1 long run,” he said.
* * *
to settle comfortably without iraving
to make last-minute changes in
tlve script.
The Fellowship
Of Prayer
BY DR GATUS GLENN ATKINS
agent at
me
mmm|
CWAt I FNGED BY OUK
OWN BEST
Wednesday, Feb. 25. "But call to
remembrance the former da vs in
which . . . ve endured. . .” Read He-
brnus in S7-39.
There is. says this passage. not,
the fact-
filled mind dominating every dis-
cussion, the veteran authority or
constitutional law, the classics and I
• BEHIND THE SCENES
IN WASHINGTON
Murray forum is a thick slice of
education, Juicy and spicy.
# # 13
HE elder statesman's calls arc
to deliver copies of ids latest
less, the percentage remains too high if we are tfoinpr to
do much about Pearl Harbor other than throw out our
chests and predict dire things for the enemy.
* * *
yUCH fair weather patriots not only defeat the purpose of
J the stamp program—to sharpen the ax for the axis—
but they cost the treasury department money because
stamps turned back must be canceled. Thus a tremendous
amount of printing and paper goes down the river. Fur-
thermore, the redeemers are tossing away the very best
investment in the world.
Possibly the treasury may do something about it. It
would be a far better tiling, however, if we all would re-
solve to build and perpetuate our patriotism on solid ground, ing them live and breathe again,
and issue a sort of moral building code outlawing false Murray hauled out a letter from
fronts. 811 eastern professor praising the
_ book and taking issue with some
work. "The Finished Scholar," p
meaty collection of advice with
the Mutiny slant, which he selc
at a dollar a copy nnd willingly
autographs.
A reporter asked him how many
he had sold—“about 1.800"
Roars anrl Rumbles From Capitol Hill
Continue in Office of Civilian Defense
Hollywood
Film Shop
By Charles Moore
United Press Correspondent
n OY LITER, county
Fn. perry, reports that a Chester
White sow owned by James Byrd,
member of the Red Rock 4-H club,
farrowed 20 pigs, of which 17 still
are alive.
i This was the fourth litter the sow
I lind farrowed and previously had
| averaged 14 to Hi per litter. James r.nlv a dist.irbhrebut.aM^Mrr
Is raising six of the nbw pigs on a
bottle.
"We still are wondering if this
sow lias been keeping up with the
national defense work that is going
cn," Etter said.
* * *
rT',HAT occasional soft-shelled egg
* that a hen lavs is not due to
rnultv feeding, says R. George Jean. s0 f>”'
poultry sneeialist at Oklahoma A. The answer comes: "Yes, vnu and
and M. college. i vaur world are changed, but. voti
"Internal body irritation, bruises bore hard things once nnd vour
from rough handling or fright, a virtnrv over them is vour "mildest
in the reeolleetion of our braver mo-
ments T* is not ensv in one’s times
of lethargy end hesitation to hear
the renrnneh of the seif that, onee
w» brave end ea^er. We heein at
once to make amuses. "But T was
i voting then ” “The world was so
different.” “You don't exneet ore
to be always striking twelve?" And
BY PETEK FDSON
NEA Service Washington Correspondent
sudden hormone unbalance, or fail-
ure of shell-forming glands may
nroduce these defective eggs." he ex-
plains.
* * *
recollect ion. Rise then hv God's lielr>
to this new oeeasion." Faeti one of
us has a self which asks us to mnk*
the level of past achievement and
endurance a point, of departure for
W/ASHINGTON. It was at. on $ flair nllended by only the highest
officials in Washington. The highest United States official present
conversed long and earnestly with Soviet Ambassador Maxim Lit-
vinov. Afterward, the American reported, “You know, I talked to
him for over an hour about God, but at the end he was still uncon-
vinced.”
• • •
IIOLLYWOOD. Feb. 25 — (U.fi) -
ll only Mr. K. and Mr. Whiskers F)fff- MTNNICK. dairyman who the next stone in the road that.
co,d.l say for certain, but Clarence j Xnh thT'rinM^ that
Bucltnrton Holland quite prob^ly' ct U|J, jn a tr(inch siln last sum_ we "win ourselves"
is the top "money writer for the mer jins Biven him a greater return Braver: Grant to us. our Father.
Then launching into a discussion
of Shakespeare anti Homer. mak-J
A drama critic says an international cultural society Murrayism* that only scholars dare
formed after the war would assure future peace. Might1 ^ a,,;ur B,K>ut Murrav analyzed
work if it could he organized without people. ...
tiiGOVERNOR,
IJ .
Many of those who registered in the 20-44 age jiroup
probably wouldn’t mind IxMnyr called before spring house-
cleaning: starts.
somebody nsked
'how much did you put out
for expenses of the constitutional
convention in 1907?"
"Four thousand dollars.”
"What’s to prevent your pre-
A foreign broadcast tells us Hitler wears a nightshirt.
Thought he said he wasn’t going to take off his uniform _.,«p rlail" to 11,0 lc8lsla
till Germany won the war.
The Catawba Indian tribe has declared war on Ger-
many. They must have seen that long lock of hair down
over Hitler’R eyebrow.
The war will make women’s hats more sensible, says
a millinery designer. Instead of wasting fruit and vege-
tables on hats, we’ll put ’em on the table.
The content of tin in tin cans has been reduced. The
war is even hard on the goats.
explosion which may hit OlRco of Civilian Defense harder than
anything yet may be an expose on the way local interests have
tried to seize control of local defense councils and divert the local
civilian defense effort to selfish interests. Reports are beginning to
trickle into Washington of strong Coughlinite. Ku Klux Klan, nnd
similar drives to take over loenl civilian defense councils in areas
where these groups have active organizations. In other areas, the
dominant political machines freeze out all opposition party members
from holding office an harden and so on.
This is a situation over which the Washington OCD headquarters has
no jurisdiction, authority or control. Civilian defense in any com-
tnunity i' ultimately a local problem. National headquarters of OCD
will, however, probably get blamed for the dirty , work in any com-
munity where a shirt organization con get control.
The days are not far away when the school board will
nave to yield to the springboard.
Maple sugar season means more than ever this year.
Even the sap is working against the Jap.
When automobile production is resumed, the engine
may be placed in the rear. Closer to the No. 1 driver.
The nation's hens broke all records by laying 3,371,-
000,000 eggs in January. They also serve who only set.
• Down Memory Lane
Feb, 25, 1932
Letters were presented to 13 members of the 1931
El Reno junior highschool football squad during the as-
sembly program today. Those receiving letters were Donald
Barnes, Harold Estep, Lonnie Roush, Harvey Slade, Fred
Thompson, Jack Harth, Arthur Mays, Charles Chastain,
Therman Marlow, Gene Wilmont, Don Wright. Jim Mosley
and Carl Roblyer. They were coached by L. W. Mayfield.
John Stanley, Canadian county assessor, was to have
completed his schedule in the townships for the personal
assessments today,
During the assembly program at the El Reno high-
school this morning. Ernest Joule, yell leader, was present-
ed a white sweater by the Pepett club. A similar gift has
been given to the yell leaders of the school for the past
seven years.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Moon, Mrs. Leona Boardman, Mrs.
W. Arthur Biggert, Paul Wade and Harry Schroeder will
be among the El Reno fans at the Indian-Comet clash in
the Classen gymnasium at Oklahoma City tonight.
Mrs. Roy W. Friday and daughters, Joyce and Jeanne,
have returned to their home in Rock Island, 111., after a
visit with Mrs. Friday’s sister, Mrs. Edward R. Slattery,
920 West Woodson street.
lure now?”
"They wouldn't pay it."
The father of the Oklahoma
constitution, that 1ms brrn studied
by university government classes
as a model, was asked how the
debt was created.
"Our money gave out before we
got through writing the constitu-
tion," Murray said. "I told 'em
that if the delegates would serve
without pay and give me the right
to hire and fire employes. I'd
finish it.
"I appealed to the people to
send in a dollar apiece. We got
$2,047. I was afraid to make a
second call fer fear it would weak-
en the convention morale. I fired
about half the employes, keeping
those I knew were good at the
work
"Four of them agreed to wait
for their pay until the state was
admitted. The others I undertook
to pay
"When I couldn't gel any more
money without making a call to
the people, I went to a bank at
Tishomingo and borrowed it at dif-
ferent times After I had bor-
rowed enough to put the constitu-
tion on parchment, the delegates
left me there to complete the work
and to convene afterwards."
Murray said he went on a lec-
ture tour and earned the money
to pay the notes.
In the first legislature, Murray
was speaker of the house. Friends
urged him. he said, to let them
pass a bill to repay him, but Mur-
ray pointed to the constitutional
prohibition against a member
benefiting from an appropriation
in his own session and replied "I
don't want to be the first to
violate it.”
"We’ll wait for the next legis-
lature to do It.” he said.
He is still waiting. ,
. * >l< #
OTRANOE note: "Alfalfa Bill"
Murray is bigger news outside
Oklahoma than within it. His in-
dependence perhaps is to blame.
No new dealer, he Introduced Lan-
don here in 1936 and severly criti-
cized the Roosevelt foreign policies
before the war. Critics assail his
judgment, but not his sincerity.
As for "Alfalfa Bill." he follows
his convictions—and doesn't give
a Murray damn
^ T is; going to be a tough job, but Dean James M. Landis may In
the long l int he .able to clean house at OCD headquarters and get
rid of ill (he fancy dancing. The technique by which the face of the
civilian defeu e effort may be saved is to transfer all the boondoggling
activities to an outfit known in Washington as ODHWS, which is
Paul :Vf«■Nutt’s Office of Defense Health and Welfare Services.
ODHWS now has programs operating under a nutrition division, a
recreation section, a family security committee, a committee of com-
munity organization, a health nnd medical committee and a Social
Protection section which is known as the sin section nnd deals with
controlling commercialized vice.
As you can see. an existing organization with programs as broad
as these could readily absorb a few more plain and fancy activities,
including even some of the strange things that have gone on in OCD.
If amalgamated in ODHWS, all the artificial morale building stimuli
would be under one tent, nnd it would be a circus to put the greatest
show on earth nut of business.
t * * *
JMPI'.TllS for the movement to have the moving picture industry
declared an essential industry so as to exempt some movie per-
sonnel from selective service came from the belief that people like
, movies.
i He spends little time in Hollywood,
but there is scarcely a month when
Ian adaptation of once of his novels
! or short stories is not in preparation
for the screen.
The great number of Holland
stories used in pictures has brought
him standing equivalent to that of
j such men as the late Zone Grey,
who earned more than a million dol-
lars from pictures.
1 His latest is “Valley of the Sun,”
which first appeared as a maga-
| zinc serial. It is being produced
| by RKO and will star James Craig
i and Lucille Ball in the tale of
: Arizona ranch life.
Holland’s first screen hit
“Speak Easily." starring Buster
Keaton, in 1932. The highly suc-
cessful "Mr. Deeds Goes to Town"
was an adaptation of a Holland
story.
Harold Lloyd’s "The Cat's Paw”
was another. And the "Scattergood
Baines" pictures are building up a
following equal to that they achieved
as magazine short stories.
Among the many others put on
film were "Arizona," "Stand-In,”
“Mr. Boggs Steps Out." "Strike Mo
Pink," “Mr. Dodd Takes the Air,"
"Florida Special" and "Thirty Day
Princess.”
The movies have great respect
than 63 acres of wheat he raised on
the same farm lost y-ar. The return
from his cows which were fed en-
silage will far exceed the returns
from the 63 acres of wheat. Mlnnick
said.
• PRORLEM A DAY
in anv time of need or nornlexity
some needed guidance through our
remembrances of past experiences.
Mev a lively sense of former failures
keen us very humble, the memorv
of what we have already endured
establish us in steed fast ness and
the assurance of thy sunoort al-
ready gained Rive us courage to po
on. Through Jesus Christ our lord.
Amen. iCopvrivht 1942 by tire Oom-
A boy had some change amount- mission on Evangelism and Dr'VO-
ing to 84.70 in dimes and quarters, tional Life.t
If he had 5 fewer quarters than -------
dimes, how many of each coin had 1I0UBS UANTFD
ne?
ANSWER DENVER—(U.P)—Coiorftuo’s min-
12 quarters: 17 dimes. Explanation el's have asked that the 40-hour
i — Multiply 5 by 0.10 and subtract work week be abandoned for the
was | from 4 70: divide bv the sum of duration. The state association
0 25 and 0.10 for the number of urges a longer work week and
quarters: add 5 for the number of draft deferment for skilled mine
dimes. 'and mill workers.
U. S. FLEET COMMANDER
HORIZONTAL
2 Pictured U.
S. fleet com-
mander-in-
Chief,-
Answer lo Previous Puzzle
Jimmy Stewart and Frank Capra were a darn sight more useful to , anr| admiration for Holland's versa
tillty and consistently excellent
I stories. And they have learned that
authors as widely read as he bring
Hie American people if they stayed in Hollywood and did their stuff
there, than they would be by jumping into a uniform and playing
soldier or sailor.
The names of Stewart and Capra were not mentioned in Brig. Gen.
Lewis B. Hershey’s orders declaring the movies an essential indus-
try. hm their rases personalize the whole issue. Jimmy Stewart is
now a lieutenant, doing nothing, apparently, that any other lieutenant
couldn't do. Capra wanted to be a major to have a hand in produc-
tion o| Army training films. These Army training films are impor-
tant, hut Hie idea of Government Film Co-ordinator Lowell Mellctt ... , . ,
i: that people like Stewart and Capra have a still more important job ^ nt y' who has morc han
to do in keeping up the morale of the American people by providing yeafs on stage and screen,
good entertainment.
with them a large ready mad? audi-
ence for the movies.
♦ * *
men in Hollywood is Dame May
• MT. ZION
• LOOK AND LEARN
The Women’s Missionary society
will meet with Rev. and Mrs. G. L.
Trabant Thursday afternoon for
lesson study and a social hour.
Members of the society will serve
lurjeh at noon to those taking part
in the rabbit and coyote hunt Sat-
urday.
Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Clovis spent
Wednesday at Etillwater. They vis-
ited thrir son. Ralph, who is attend-
ing Oklahoma A. and M. college.
Harold Scott, who has been em-
ployed in a defense plant at Wich-
ita, Kan., for several months, is
spending this week with his par-
ents, Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Scott, and
with Mr. and Mrs. Hermit Scott and
son nnd his grandmother, Mrs. Alva
Scott, before entering the armed [
sendee.
B L. Beccham was a Sunday din-1
ner guest of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph j
Royse and son, Virdin. Afternoon I
visitors were Mr. and Mrs. Eldon I
Royse. Miss Peari Eileen Royse, Mr.
and Mrs. E. C. Frederick and daugh-
ter, Carole Sue, of Jones, Mrs.
George Frederick of Apache and
John Frederick of Oklahoma City.
I She's in her seventies, but is still
‘ at the peak of her career and has
, not the slit htest thought of retiring.
! "Quit?” she says. “Only the aged
; and infirm quit, and I nm neither.
So long as I can do my bit, I’ll
! keep right on doing it."
In August of next year she and
Ben Webster will celebrate their
1. What line follows: “Laugh and
the world laughs with you——”?
2. How many yards are there in
a furlong?
3. What is the distinction between golden wedding anniversary. She’ll
the terms “bi-monthly” and “semi- probably be just as busy then as
monthly?" | now.
4. What insect has carried death | Her current screen role is that
to more human beings than all the of Lady Beldon in M-G-M’s “Mrs.
12 Exclamation
•f surprise.
14 Concern.
15 To the
inside of.
16 Him.
17 Contend.
19 Border.
20 Months
(abbr.).
21 Meadow.
22 Bark.
24 Tendon.
26 Lines.
27 Fish organ.
29 Two fives.
30 Light tap. .
31 From.
33 Assist.
41 Editor (abbr.)
42 Metal.
44 Grove.
45 Fish.
40 Sailor.
48 Blemish.
50 Wall painting.
52 Mongrel.
53 Belonging
lo him.
35 Three (prefix) 54 Female of
36 Old English cattle.
56 Near.
57 Most
desirable.
58 Dove's calL
59 Counterfeit. *
(abbr.).
38 He sails on
a-
39 His crewmen
are --.
VERTICAL
1 He is an
officer of the
U. S.-.
3 District of
Columbia
(abbr.). _
4 Disfigure.
5 Flower.
6 Send back.
7 Threshold of
psychological
stimulus.
8 Have
knowledge of. 53 She.
9 It is (contr.). 55 Grief.
10 Negative. 56 Exist.
11 He sails the
seven -.
13 Incite.
16 Chop.
18 Sprite.
21 Allotment.
23 Spanish coin.
25 Novel.
26 Metal bar*.
28 Nothing.
30 Before.
31 Be in debt
32 Fashion.
34 Clamor.
35 Tag.
36 Mineral rock
37 Is (Latin).
40 All right
(abbr.).
43 In place of.
45 Hearing
organ.
46 High relish.
47 Berry (bot ).
48 Examine
49 Mow, as hay.
50 Unmarried
woman.
51 Booty.
beasts of prey and poisonous rep-
tiles combined?
5. In what year was the first
motion picture publicly exhibited?
ANSWERS
1. "Weep and you weep alone,
from the poem "Solitude," by
Wheeler Wilcox.
2. 220 yards.
3. “Bi-monthly" means once in two
mo n tits, “aemi-rnonthly" means
twice a month.
4. The fly.
5. May 20, 1895.
Miniver.” starring Greer Garson and ]
Walter Pidgeon.
“It is a nostalgic role and picture
for me,” she said, “because it deals
with the people and scenes I know so
well. It* is the story of the middle
Ella class English people, who are so gal-
lantly carrying on the work in this
war that I had the privilege of par-
ticipating in during the last one.”
Her title was acquired during
World War I when she became a
| dame commander of the Excellent
i Order of the British Empire, one of
1 four so honored.
FIRST ABSENCE IN 31 YEARS
Notwithstanding her stage and
PASADENA, Calif.—(11.8)—A re- screen appearances, she recalls mo«t
cent illness that necessitated hospi- | vividly her "appearance” before the
tallzation of Qeorge Herbert Leem- | late King George V to receive the
lng caused him to mlsa hi* Sunday | sliver star and gold cross of the
Bible class for the first time in 31! order. She said she had the jitters
years. 1 for the first time in her life.
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Dyer, Ray J. The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 50, No. 307, Ed. 1 Wednesday, February 25, 1942, newspaper, February 25, 1942; El Reno, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc919704/m1/4/?q=j+w+gardner: accessed June 27, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.