The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 53, No. 69, Ed. 1 Friday, May 19, 1944 Page: 2 of 10
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4,500,000 Children Live
In Disrupted Families
NEW YORK. May 19—fU.fi)—About
4.500,000 American children under
18 years of age—about one-ninth of
the total number—are members of
families broken by death repara-
tion or divorce, according to sta-
tisticians of the Metropolitan Life
j Insurance company,
j Commenting on the prevalence of
Juvenile delinquents that come from
broken families, it was pointed out
chat one-tenth of ail white chii-
I drrn and as many as one-fifth of
nepro children are not in homes
headed by a husband and wife Uv-1
Iing together
By far the most important cause
ot iairniy disruption is the death
of mother or father, the report said |
In 1940 there were 3,848000 chil-
dren, at least cure of whose parents
war dead
_ al Keno, (Okia.) Daily Tribune
Example of German Jitters
Friday, May 19, 1944
Elm Glen
5. Nauy Photo fron^MfriJ
Who's this guv Atlas'* says Lloyd C Russell, recruit at Farragut
Idaho, Naval Training Center Russell, five feel foui and weighitq
ISO is shown balancing a six-foot pushball
‘Bonfils diaper
Is Donated
Puolic Records
Marriage License
Clarence 8. McLaughlin. 21. of
chanel and baotKtrv which will be fto" H,,U:it4,n’’ Tex ’ and 1
cnapei ana baptistry widen win bt Marle Bucklfs 18 ol Lubbock, Tex
KANSAS CITY, Mo . MiiV 19—<U.R)
—The Community church will add a
known as the “Bonfils chapel," giv-
en in memory of the late Pied O.
Bonfils by hi daughter, Mrs Helen tkm to Ben s Bo ler intr
Warranty Deeds
Federal Farm Mortgage corpora-
3 and
Bonfils Somnes of New York, it
was announced here recently.
Pastor of the church. Dr Bur-
rU A. Jenkins, was editor of the
old Kansas City Post when Bonfils
and H. If. Tammen. famed editors of
another era, operated the paper
Dr, Jenklre has been pastor of the
church for it third of a century.
The chapel will be built on a
steel skeleton, originally designed
as a parking lot. It will eost about
$9,500 to build and will seat 1U4
persons
4 29-11-7
E. Clark et ul to Joseph F
Nlghswander Part ot lot 2 and lot
3, block 98. El Reno
George E. and Nettle P Hurst
to Charles A and Victoria A
Pribyl Part of E NW 28-12-7
M P. Atklson to Daniel Logglnr
Lot 26, block 1, Douglas Heights
addition to El Reno
Yukon Mill and Grain company
to Victor BartodeJ Purl of lot 21,
block 109. Lake addition to Yukon.
Mr and Mrs. Lacy Kreger, Mias
Vida Kreger. Mrs. W D Dilling-
ham, Mr and Mrs. Otis Bruce,
Mr and Mrs. A. T. Brodersen,
Hergeant Warner Garnett, son of
Mrs. Brodersen, Mr. and Mrs W
F Schumacher and Mrs. William
Wallace, Jr., enjoyed a picnic Tues-
day at the Suchmacher farm in
honor of Hergeant Qaruett
Mi and Mrs Harry Carter, Mrs.
Arthur Ward and son, Mr. and
Mi H E Palmer, Mr. and Mrs
Lynn Heltman. Mr and Mrs. Leo-
nard palmer ana son were dinner
, guet ts of Mr and Mrs Mervtl
I Moffat Sunday. ,
Machinist s Mate First Class and
Mrs Jack Blanchard and Lacy
i< i ever made a business trip to
Muskogee Monday.
Himday night visitors of Mr. and
Mr Prank Hrdy were Mr, und
Mr Bill Hallcka and daughter.
Ruth Ann of Chicago, Mr. and
Mr William Schumacher, daugh-
ter Lillie Mae, and son, Lewis.
Mr and Mrs. W F. Schumacher
mi daughter were among the din-
ner guests of the former's moth-1
err: Mrs. Emma Schumacher, on!
Mother's day.
Mi und Mrs. Otis Bruce and
on, Mr and Mrs W F. Schu-
macher and son attended the ban-
quet for members of the El Reno
hlghs liool band Tuesday night In
the Central Methodist church at I
El Reno
German jitters over the known strength and lierceness of France’s
underground army find expression in frequent roundups of civil-
ians in hope of finding members of the "Maquis’’ or evidence of
anti-Nazi activity The photo above shows a German patrol,
watched by the officer »n charge, as they searcti suspected French-
men. (Photo from March of Time's "Underground Report" from
_ NEA.)
Modern Menus
Sam M Dunn to Joseph Curtis
The churrh itself was the cen- Penwrlght Lots 1 unit 2 block 3,
ter of much controversy before it Calumet
was built. A windowless structure
of steel and granite. It was de-
signed by Architect Frank Lloyd
Wright and hailed by him as the
"church of the future.'1 Complete-
ly functional, it Is air-conditioned
In summer and heated ki winter by
air blown through the walls.
For some time city officials, al-
though taking no action to stop
corstruction, had refused to issue a
building permit for the unusual ■
structure
Texas Does Things Big,
Even When It Rains
AU8TIN, Tex, May 19 —(U P)— :
Though Texas is mntrallv thought
of as dry. It is not particularly rare
for the dbuthern halt of the tate to
have nearly 24 inches of rain In 24
hour*.
. Trigg Twirhell, hydraulic engi-
neer of tlie tf H Geological Hurvey
cites these fiu Is regarding preemi-
tation in the atate
At Taylor, Tex 23 il Inches of
rain fell in 24 hour. In September
1921, and In some place near tire
community 30 Inches fell In 16
hours during the t ame storm. Twen-
ty Inches fell In three hours at the
Woodward Ranch near DHanls In
May 1935. official records reveal
If tlie average annual run-off of
Texas streams—including the Rio
Grande and Red rivers
ed onto a single plain it would rov-
er 43 000 000 acres a foot deep.
The amount of run-off varies
greatly In 1925 It a us less than
30,000.000 acre-feet, while in 1941
It set a record of yu 000 000 acre-
feel.
As for the importance of water
to littie-thought-of uses, Twitched
said: too gallons of water Is used
per pound of yam In making Vla-
coae rayon; 170.000 gallons is need-
ed for a ton of paper; for each gal-
lon of aviation gasoline 26 gallons
of condensing water is required
nmt ot all tilings, • keg of beei uses
1,260 gallons of processing water
TOMBSTONES FOB tWOL'S
SIOUX FALL8. 8 D.—<U.R)—The
Bloux Palls army air base already
has one of the lowest AWOL rec-
ords In the nation. But Major C.
T. Plots. post Judge ad<oc»te. was
determined to make it better Sev-
eral tomstonac were erected at the
bunks of men charged with being
AWOL. The grim markers bear
tlie Inscription"(Name! went
AWoL, leaving us to do his work as
Well as our own.”
If11*"11 imm> mvn
■ hc fg
K ANVatllOJ SUUCOT M
N NVKIVNVJ S
ft. eeovu tLO | mo v*o
■ aXNIVJ - HXJVdl’IVM ■
W. I and Helen Dir! kson to
Llnnie M Dlrlck un Lot 3 4 and
5, block 4. Calumet
tJuitWaiiu fired
M P Aiklaon to Dsnle! Uiggins
I 19 ll i
(IIIIon to El Ren t
Miik i.iI Dn its
Floyd and Myrtle
Lawson
Lucian Erwin Lot', i
.tl.U 2
E NW 18-11-5
W H. and Addm
E Tow
Oeorge W Leigh tun
NE 25.;
Oil anti Gas 1
4*01K‘S
M T Myers to ft
>\ d C <
NICE INTRODUCTION
f!T JOSEPH, Mu—(«.*>—“You’re
chained with being drunk, to the
annoyance of the public," City At-
torney William H. Uts, Jr., Inform-
ed the man approaching Police
Jmlve Fred Waugers bench In po-
ll-» ourt here recently With some
confusion, the man hurriedly ex-
plained that he was not the de-
fendant. but was the new police of-
ficer on the force who had made
the arrest, and had come to court
to testify in the co6e The reaj de-
trodent did not appear and was
fined by default.
BY GAYNOR MADDOX
NEA Staff Writer
j^'RUITS combined with pastry
or bread make mouth-water-
ing desserts Here's an example
Maryland Baked Apples
(Serves 6)
Six apples, peeled and cored, 6
slices bread, cut round and but-
tered, 2 tablespoons butter, extra
sugar and butter for basting, l
cup brown sugar
Stuff the core of each apple with
brown sugar and butter Butter
a large, flat baking dish Lay the
six buttered rounds of bread in it
and place a prepared apple on
each.
Set the dish In a shallow pan
of water and then in a moderate
oven (350 degrees F.). Bake for
25 to 40 minutes. Baste with melt-
ed brown sugar and water several
times throughout the baking
Strawberry Shortcake Cups
(6 cups)
Two cups enriched all-purpose
flour, 3 teaspoons baking powder,
li teaspoon salt, 4 tablespoons
fortified margarine, cup milk,
3 cups sweetened berries. 7-min-
ute frpsting, or white cream
cheese, or whipped light cream
Sift, measure flour and resift
with baking powder and salt Cut
in fortified margarine until coarse
crumbs are formed Add milk and
stir lightly with fork. Turn out
TOMORROW’S MENU
BREAKF AST: Stewed
rhubarb, oatmeal, fried to-
matoes, rye toast, butter or
fortified margarine, coffee
milk.
LUNCHEON Toasted rolls
•with leftover veal gravy,
raw vegetable salad, whole
wheat bread, butter or for-
tified margarine, Maryland
baked apples, tea, milk.
DINNER Rice tomato
soup, liver and bacon,
creamed new potatoes, green
beans, enriched hard rolls,
butter or fortified margarine,
watercress salad, strawberry
shortcake cups, coffee, milk.
onto floured cloth. Knead gently
until muoth on one side. Roll
to Ti inch thick. Cut ti circles
4-5 inches in diameter. Brush with
melted margarine. Reroll trim-
mings and cut 6 small circles.
Pinch or cut edges into points
Bake both cups and caps in very
hot oven (450 degrees F.) 15 min-
uter Remove from pans at once
and till with sweetened berries or
fresh fruit Top with cap and
garnish as desired. Those straw-
berry cups wuld be appropriate
for a June wedding. <
From the newly revised “Fifty
Yeai i in a Maryland Kitchen ’
come: this apple recipe.'
Mexican Airline
Shows Big Gain
MEXICO CITY, May 19—OJ.R) —
Volume of air cargo carried by
planes of the Compania Mexicunu
de Avlacion, a Pan American Air-
ways subsidiary, Jumped 300 per- j
cent In 1943 and Included a wide
variety of articles from fresh lobs-
ters to daily newspapers.
Indicating that Mexico, like many |
Latin American countries, has also
enjoyed a rapid transition from
the burro to the airplane, are CMA
figures revealing that 11.685,073
pounds of freight were handled by
its planes in 1943—a 300 percent
increase over 1942. Airmail pound-
age also doubled last year.
Newspapers enjoy a uniform rate
of 10 cents a pound to any spot in
the Republic, and CMA carries an
average of 1,320 pounds of papers
daily as far south as the Yucatan
peninsula and as far north as Mexi-
cali, Baja California, which is 1,400
miles from the capital
Every week more than 4,000.000
pesos (about $800,000) Is flown to
remote areas to meet pay rolls.
Movie films at about one ton a
month are distributed outside the
capital by plane, and three tons of
Mexico's famous silver Jewelry are
carried Into Central and South
America monthly.
Pish food from both the Pacific
and gulf coast ports Is flown into
Mexico City dally.
One man in Tapachula, Chiapas
State, suffering diabetes, has been
receiving a loaf of specially-baked
bread every other day on the morn-
ing plane from Mexico City for
many months.
CMA also operates a special air
express shopping service wherein the
purchaser deposits his money in
one town and CMA buyers purchase
the desired article somewhere else
and ship it back to him.
Air (Jadets Have
Parallel Service
STUTTGART, Ark., May 19
(U.fi)—If tradition means anything
at all in the air forces, seven men
now awaiting aviation training at
the field here should be aces In
the same fighter squadron before
the war Is over.
The lucky seven are Statf Ser-
geants Jessee W Frost of Mon-
tague, Calif.; Vernon L. Light,
Newman, 111.; George W Clemmur,
Royal Oaks, Mich.; Rolland L
Gardner, Wlcford, R. I.; Joseph
Gray, New Providence Township
N. J.; and Corporal Eugene A
MatlHa, Townsend, Mass.
All of them went overseas to-
gether, and were stationed at the
same fighter base in England for
13 months where they serviced
Thunderbolts flown by the aces of
Colonel Robert Zeinke’s top-scoring
fighter group.
They all applied for aviation
cadet training together and re-
turned to the states together.
All were in the same Thunder-
bolt squadron first to arrive in
England with its own personnel
Frederick Stores To
Close on Five Holidays
FREDERICK. May 19 - (U.R1—
Frederick business men have agreed
to close shop on five days each year,
without further discussion of tha
matter.
The holidays chosen In a city-
wide vdte on holiday popularity were
Christinas, Thanksgiving, Armistice
day, July Fourth and Memorial day
VICTORY SODA JKKKEKS
BOSTON—(UP)—Soda Jerking for
victory Is the latest war effort con-
tribution of youthful Boston so-
cialites. who work two evenings a
week at the new Chutlerbox club
serving" up cokes tor service men
and women.
KooliUd
WHERE l WAO BO?N,*TH£ DOCTOR'S
MIDDLE N/AME AND THI MD/AbLR
OF PEOPLE NAMED JOF IN THE
TOWN HAS NOTHING TO
do with a ticket fch
SPEEDING, YOuRf JUST
stalling so you rAt^
NEAR THE IQ-2~'t
RANCH PROGRAM[/ m T<
153-POUND STURGEON
VERMILLION. Ohio—:u.PJ—Broth-
er. this isn't any ordinary fish
story. Lake Erie fishermen here
recently caught a 153-pound, six-
foot, two-inch sturgeon—the biggest
hooked in the lake waters In 25 i
years.
RHEUMATIC PAINS i
HSa?
SHes J*BS.“.Msa ■«-
sswtm urns -f.-axr Jr.
MW.I U K', in (.**»! ”
SCHOOLING DRUG f O.
BEAVER CATCH DECREASES
AUGUBTA, Me.—<U.R>— Either (he
beavers arf getting smarter or the
hunters are losing their skill, or
maybe It’s the manpower shortage.
Anyway, the state fish and game
department says that nearly 1,000
lewer beavers were taken by Malm-
trappers last winter than a year
ago.
Farmers at Drumright
(iet Fire Protection
DRUMRIGHT. May 19 —(U.R)_
Farmers living within u three-mile
radius of the Diumright city limits
me now able to obtain protection
ol the city fire department by sign-
ing a contract with the city. No
charges will be nuiae except when
u call is answered
Cor-
ner NW 31-13-9 8W 24-13-lU SE
24-13-10. NW 30-13 9 ami NW 36-
13-10
WlUsrd L Miller and M
Myers to Floyd C Corner NK 25-
13-10. NE 30-13-9, SE 2()-IJ 9 NW
•NE 26-13-10 it lid NE NK _'H-13-10
Alma Gregory, guardian of the
j estate of Jean Srheln to carl
S Ford BW 14-13-6
J. M. und Mue B rtpetee to
J. D Kennedy HE 16-14-6, >4W
27-15-5, NW 26-16-6. KK 5-16-5
and 8 8W NW 32-17-5
Oil und Gas Asslyiinients
William H. Atkinson to F n.
Pox and W J Fox N 8E 12-14-5
and N NE 11-14-5
NO DUTY ON CEMENT
MEXICO CITY (UR> -A memor-
andum signed by President Manuel
sbs jioiir Avila Camacho permi1 ihe im|>.*r—
tatlon of porllaud cement free of
duties, provided it Is li ed In public
works, either federal or state
Housewives . .
#
NO NEED TO WORRY YOUR HEAD OFF
■ 00
ABOUT NOT BEING ABLE TO BUY
TEA TOWELS WHEN YOU CAN SECURE
New Beautiful Tea Towels
I YARD SQUARE WITH
Canadian’s Best
PLAIN PIqui* SELF-RISING
EITHER 25 or 50 POUND SACKS
Canadian's Besl May Be Purchased
At All Leading Grocers.
REFRESHING SUMMER
DRINKS
|kool ade. iced tea, e-z
ADE. OVAI.TINE, HEMO AND
OTHERS
IT’S ICE CREAM SEASON
WE HAVE
ICE CREAM SALT AND ALL
KINDS ICE CREAM MIXES.
Pillsbury’s
w!\\ BEST FLOUR
, xx xx
y>»/
•j.*
All Purpose • Enriched
Canadian Mil1 *Eleva,or
El keno, Oklahoma
LUX TOILET SOAP ........8c
LIFEBUOY HEALTH SOAP...8c
SWAN TOILET SOAP ......8c
Cellophane Wrapped Very Lean
HAMS lb. 40c
4 to 6-lb. Average
NECKBONES................................. 3 lbs. 25c
PORK SHOULDER .........lb. 30c SWEETHEART BACON ..... lb. 38c
LOIN SWISS STEAK..........lb. 28c LEAN PORK CHOPS........ lb. 35c
Cfc Cfc Cfe
X-3'ANADIANVy<)UNTYA' Wh
^•OPERATIVE
I. K. KUM.MANN, MANAGER
"WE FAT HIGHEST PRICES FOR I KF.SII KHJNIKV LOOM"
1 S 5 S 7 * '0 = 0. i i's'iaj'ayy.iiioj'a’n
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Dyer, Ray J. The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 53, No. 69, Ed. 1 Friday, May 19, 1944, newspaper, May 19, 1944; El Reno, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc919925/m1/2/: accessed April 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.