The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 47, No. 46, Ed. 1 Friday, April 29, 1938 Page: 1 of 8
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I—
JAY, APRIL 28, 1938.
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The Heart of the Rich
Canadian Valley
The El Reno Daily Tribune
A Blue Ribbon Daily Newspaper Serving Oklahoma’s Blue Ribbon Area
You Can Buy It For
Leaa In El Reno
Single Copy, Three Cents
(>P) MEANS ASSOCIATED PRESS
EL RENO, OKLAHOMA, FRIDAY, APRIL 29, 1938
(U.PJ MEANS UNITED PRESS
VOLUME 47, NO. 46
IE SCHOOL
ffillEJTEIS
Awards From Civic Body
Are Issued Today By
Chairman
%'E’S WONDERING JUST WHAT MAKES IT GO
Letter awards to basketball play*
*rs In El Reno's four elementary
schools were Issued today by Al-
lison Clark, chairman of the ath-
letic committee of the Junior cham-
ber of commerce.
A complete schedule of games
was played between the schools the
past season with Irving taking the
championship without losing a single
start.
Individuals to receive the emblems
today were:
Webster school—Leslie Oregory.
Ted Handley, Wayne Kenaga.
Lawrence Miller. John MUler. John
Taylor.
Central school—Robert Morgan.
LeRoy Merveldt. Bobby Detrick.
Jesse Urton. Johnny Orant. Bobby
Brindley. Vernon McOlnley. Lee-
land Luttrell.
Lin col school—Jay Freeman. Mel-
vin Freeman, N. L. Sybert. James i
Btreltenberger. Olln McNew. Don - i
aid 8tevenson. Clifton Oreany.l
Howard Gustafson.
Champions Listed
Irving school—Walter Blackowl.
Arlie Pennington. Junior Loyall.
Bobby Doeler. BUI Blggert, Lester
Moline. Teddle Clay Pennington.
Hershel Powell. Emmett Sherman.
Qllly Pllppln. Ivan Green.
Coaches of the four teams were
Elmer P. CecU. Irving; M. C Bates,
Lincoln; Eugene Myers, Central;
and Jennings B. Newman. Webster.
The program of interschool ath-
letics the past season was sponsor-
ed by the junior chamber Irving
school, as champion In basketball,
was given a plaque by the civic
organisation earlier In the year.
Irving school also was winner
of the football championship, re-
ceiving the Junior chamber trophy
in thla sport. Individual letters also
were awarded in football ,
Athletic competition in the grade
schools was Inaugurated to fam-
iliarise the boys with the various
sports prior to I hair enrolment in
hlghschoot.
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EE RENO GROUP
SHARES HONORS
IN STATE EVENI
G. W. Warlick Receives
Music Scholarship
In Contests
More than 600 buyers throughout the United States visited the toy fair In New York and
found that emphasis was on slightly higher priced goods, following the willingness of consumers last
year to buy substantial rather than cheap merchandise Above. Anthony DeMena is Interested In a
train with a flexible track. An interesting note was that no foreign exhibits were displayed at the fair.
m NAME
IN DRESS REVUE
Mrs. R. A. Patzack And
Mrs. Joe Schein Chosen
Fort Reno Teams Enter
I*ast Stretch
Mr*. Joe Bcheln. Frisco club, and
Mrs R. A. Patzack. Mustang club,
won first place honors In the an-
nual Canadian county home dem-
onstration club dram revue con-
ducted Thursday at the Business
and Professional Women'a club tn!U* ** * *molhrr-
E1 Reno. It was announced today
Two Fort Reno erews. the Blues
and the Greens, will battle It out
Sunday for championship honors
In the spring polo tournament
being held this week at Fort Reno
The Oreens won the right to
enter the finals against the Blues,
who drew a bye after their first
round victory over the Fort 8111
Ramblers, by nosing out the Fort
8UI Freebooters jp-8 Thursday
afternoon
Captalr. William QUmore of the
Freebooters, who Tuesday drove
across Jive goals against the El
Reno Whites, repeated hi* per-
formance Thursday by chalking up
five of Fhrt Sill's tallies against
the Oreens
Jaek Oaks Injured
When Lieutenant Jack Oaks of
the Freebooters received a dis-
located elbow In a bad spill of the
game, the kaurnament'a (tret casual-
ty was marked up
The scrap was close all the way.
Fort Reno scoring the winning
goals onlv In the last period after
the two clubs played even ball
Did You Hear
I^LMER NINMAN. 15-year-old
^ Union City htghachool senior,
la one of the 29 "Master Farm-
ers" chosen at Stillwater by the
state convention of Future
Fanners of America. The title
Is the designation which the
F F. A. glvea those of Its mem-
■era whose farming records Is
considers the beat In the state.
'Die 29 boyi had a total of
126 297 51 in assets, including
savings, livestock, crops, ma-
chinery and farm equipment.
They had added 11.994.65 to
their farming revenues In pre-
miums at fairs and shows
With only one exception. Ute
29 Master Farmers' derived
their greatest Incomes from live-
stock projects.
The 1.900 F. F. A. members
at Stillwater for the convention
«U1 conclude their agricultural
contests tonight.
G. W (Warllck, El Reno hlgh-
I school senior, won a music scholar-
ship at the University of Okla-
1 Iwcna for next year In the In-
strumental music contests held
Thursday at Norman In connec-
tion with the state track meet.
A /French horn player. Warllck
gained the scholarship for tuition
in the music department, college
of fine arts, at the university.
Two other soloists and the brass
quartet won places to give El Reno
eight points In the Instrumental
music division of the lnterscholastlc
meet.
Dean Thompson, alto saxophone,
woe a rating or excellent, com-
parable to second place under the
, new system of grading, and Harry
I Porter, tenor saxophone, won a
1 third class rating.
Members of the brass quartet,
which earned a third place rating,
are lira IGoddard. Jr., Jewel Lord,
O W Warllck and Burrel Oambel
Carter Place* Flrat
Daniel Carter of El Reno won
first place in the plane geometry
I rortest In curricular competition of
[ the annual lnterscholastlc meet
The El Reno speech department.
______ under direction of JaA Douglas.
ri won second place on the radio
Program First In Obser- play, vigilantes Ride by Night."
vanfp Of Mnsir WppW The play dl*closed dangers that
\dnce UI music WeeK threatened early Oklahoma settlers
and was written by Alma M Shaw
First of the several programs Ir 0,1 Die basis of a story told by Mrs
! El Reno to observe National Muslr «!■ 8 Palmer of El Reno,
week will be a concert by the The cast for the drama Included
elementary schools' chorus of 300, Virginia Hulbert. Ned Daniels. Ar-
vo Ice* to be given at 3 p. m Sun-1 tnur Bummers, Bob Porta. John
day In the hlghschool auditorium Every and Barbara Taylor, with
Numbers for the concert were an- Charles Brindley and Hugh Robtn-
tiounced today by Miss Mary Ed- *n charge of sound effects,
wards, hlghschool supervisor Of Second Best Actress
music, as follows Virginia Hulbert was Judged the
1. "Vesper Hymn." by Bortnyan- *««>nd best actress participating In
ski. and Sweet and Low" by l Dte_ radio play_ tournament
Bamby. sung by the chonia.
3. "Dark Eyes." arranged by
Thompson, sung by Phillip Hlgg
iff:
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SIMMERS
Canadian County Figure
To Reach $152,191.80,
Report Discloses
Panda dolls, newest for kids, will be sold by the American Bureau
for Medical Aid to China. Uta Hagen, youthful actress In the Lunt-
Fontanne production of "The 8ea Oull," now In New York, buys the
first doll from little Marilyn Chu, of New York's Chinatown Dolls
are fashioned after the queer animal which Mrs. William Harknesa
brought from China
SENTENCE GIVEN
through the first five ehukker* 25-Year Term At El Reno
"Si"?* rs. And Heavy Fine Impnaed
Lester Vocke paced the -
boUuun.
3 "Tlnklf-oo." by Forman, sung
by the Central girls' quartet
4 "The Hikers," by VonBuppe.
chorus.
8 Rubinstein's "Welcome Bweet
8prtng Time," by Peggy Perkins
6. "Cradle 8ong" by Billie Jim
Little
7 Reading by Muriel Jean Wei-
man.
8. Santa Lucia." an Italian folk
song, and Welsh's "All Thro the
Night," by the chorus
9. Foster * "Beautiful Dreamer,"
by Richard Carter with Kathleen
tain
Green* bv hitting pay dirt three
time* each
Hamblen Real Anadarkn
The Tbrt Bill Rambler* went , . . ..... . .. _.
»»*»«-*■» m-™. rs* “ry.“izrr *>-.“»t*
OKLAHOMA CITY. Apr 29— (A*> kester a* accompanist
- Ray N Scruggs, former Ok la- 10 ~A ^mg song," Oerman
horns City school district treasurer, folk tune, and Donnlaettls Our
lug Anadarkn 13-6 In Thursday's
federal indictment charging em- , yyjf chorus Is trained by Mist
lienlement of school funds Vaughncllle Joseph Mias Grace
nightcap Federal Judge Edgar S Vaught Fulks. Ml*s Mary Lois Knie. Mrs
by Ml** Harvey Thompson, county | Thf ^nM),aUnn ^ sentenced Srruggs to 35 years lm- Marian Pentlco and Mias Rosa
played beginning at 1 30 p m pnsonment and flnad him 810.000 Pierce, teachers In the elementary
Saturday while the championship Vaught recommended the 43-year-, schools, with Miss Edwards direct-
finals will be played beginning at(0,<* former vice president of the Irg
3 30 p. m Sunday 1 First National Bank and Trust, mchard Carter. Billie Jim Lit-
- company here be confined In the'lle an<j Kathleen Keater are Etta
Hiohwiv (mif i-wf rf,orm,tory at ® R'no Da"1 hlghschool
Ill^lI”fiT V 411111 (U I Scruggs was arraigned unexpect- iistlng tn the program
home demonstration agent.
Club prises, based on the per-
centage of membership which parti-
cipated In the contest, went to
Rlvervlew fnr first. Red Rock for
second snd Mustang slid Piedmont
tied for third
Every member n( the Rlvervlew
club except one was entered In the
revue
In all, 55 women entered In the
work dres* division of the contact
and 3* in the street dram division.
Mrs Schein won flrat In the
work dress contest. In which Mrs
Roy Dlvls of Mayvtew was second.
Mrs J. B Wagner of Frlaco was
third. Mrs. T. J. Feddersen of
Triangle was fourth and Mrs Ployd
, Adklason oT Frisco was fifth.
Mrs Patsark won first In the
atraet dress division. In which-Mrs
J. W Rhodybark of Frisco was
second. Mr*. Iva Dickerson of Pied-
mont was third. Mrs. C. O. Weller
of Frisco was fourth and Mrs. P.
L. Mansfield of Center Orove was
nrtn
El Reno golfers failed to place
In /fleam competition at the state
meet Tulsa Central won the four-
man team crhamplonshlp. while
Oklahoma City Centrals two-man
team placed first
El Reno golfers were Frank
Gibson Sammy Shackelford. Archie
Jones. Byron Oambel and Everett
Wilson
The Individual championship was
won by Jimmy Thompson of Okla-
homa City Central with a 36-hole
score of 146
H Renos best Individual score
was that of Oambel. who carded
163 for the 36 holes, finishing in
14th (place
U RENO IK
Li
LaFollette Plan Threat To Emma Pliva Given Judg-
Democratic Ranks ment After Mishap
WASHINGTON, Apr 29 —<>P>— Judgment of 510 000 for Emma
LaFillette demands for party re- Pliva ,wa& the verdict reached lata
alignment behind a new banner Thuraday by a Canadian county
of progresslvlsm raised a threat of district court Jury In her damage
serious chasm today In the polltl- suit against T W Lackey. Beatrice
cal forces which President Roose- Creamery company of Weatherford,
veil welded Into a huge Democratic J B Cox and Ernest 8teppelman
majority. The Jury ruled against all de-
To what extent will the Demo- fendant* except Cox
STILLWATER Apr. 29—(UP)—
Farmers In the Oklahoma pan-
handle will receive greater per cap-
ita payments for partlctpatnon In
the J937 crop {control program than
those of iny other section of the
state. E R. Lancaster, state ex-
ecuted secretary of thq Agri-
cultural Adjustment administra-
tion, revealed today .
Lancaster's announcement was
based on a study of 38.519 appli-
cations lor 1937 payments received
by the office to date from Okla-
homa fanners. Checks aggregat-
ing 14. .541,*45.53 already have been
mailed to 28.908 of the applicants,
he said.
The AAA secretary's report in-
dicated that panhandle farmers
faced with a succession of poor
crops during the past several years,
have found Ik more profitable to
cooperate with the government pro-
gram than have those In richer
agricultural areas
Canadian county's estimated total
payment la 415219180 of which
•mount I7S.963.01 already has been
paid.
To Surpass 1936 Mark
Lancaster said he had "no ac-
curate" estimate of the eventual
total that 1937 payments In the
state would reach, but Indicated
the figure would be less than the
uggregate (or 1936 Some $13,907 -
667 68 was paid to 98373 Indi-
viduals In Oklahoma for cooperat-
ing with the 1938 program, Lan-
caster said
He said his office expected to
complete "the bulk' of 1937 pay-
ments by June 1. Farmers In 33
counties—lew than half the state's
total of 77—had received checks as
of Apr 30 Disbursements are be-
ing made from Dallas. Tex. upon
authority of the Oklahoma AAA
ufflce
Lancaster predicted Taxes coun-
ty would receive the largest amount
of AAA benefits, with Beaver coun-
ty second. Both are la the pan-
handle.
Caddo county poeMMy will be
I third," he said "Washita. Berk-
ham and the third panhandle ooun-
ty. Cimarron, also will receive
rather large amounts
fratio party leadership. Its ranks
rebellious, be able to retain sup-
port of 1936's mixed political bed-
fellows?
Will John L Lewis' C. I. O walk
Trial of the case opened at Q
Reno Wednesday morning with
Judge Lucius Babcock presiding.
The verdict was returned at 3:30
p m. Thuraday after Jurors had
out with the LaFollette group Into I deliberated about 45 minutes,
the national Progressives of in the plaintiff* court petition
America?" j f,ied here last July 9. the 34-year-
Wtll the American labor party old El Reno woman said she suf-
heed the LaFollette call to aban- fered serious, painful and perms-1
don reactionaries In both old par- nent Injuries to her cheat and spine
ties?" In an fuitomoblle crash July 3 8hr I
Third Term Suggested "^ed Judgment of 810.000
Involved In the outcome too. vs Accident Described
the possibility that these event* She said she was riding as a
might draw Franklin D Roosevelt tuest in the Cox car enroute to
race Thu' E! Reno from California and that
Mass Re«ijfnation Kuk-
Kested By Member
pupils as-
Voided Bv Error,y ... Wi|. < • ,
when Judge Vaught asked him Tv III /ISBlnl
Smith Campaign
! when Judge Vaught
4 plead
A mistake of 215 mile* In the w#d<>
OKLAHOMA CITY Apr
wwwvwwv _ AflftlSt&U' t’
fvr 1“ • Klirstrss ’x U;
light today with hasty cancellation
Stephen Jelka of El Reno has
Marsh Appointed
To Scouting Post
of the contract by the state high-
way commission
Commission members disclosed
they let the order to R E L Fin-
ley. Oklahoma City contractor, for! _ _.
IV4 mile* of gravel foe a road gap,'**1 mfUwd * ,wh‘«h 8cru“*
only 15.25 mile* long on *t*te high- 'onv,rta<* bond* belonging to the
way No 59. through Maud and 81 sct'°°l bo*r<* *n*° CMh- declared
Lnuto The contract called for 38 wveral times Scruggs used the
<«rU a square yard for a 34-foot n'Oh*y P*r gambling debts
roadway with .7 thickness of all '
'T purch.. ™ Danger In School
Unrated from $17 00 to 830.000 Rl|SSeS Is ShoWII
•j Scruggs' looting of school dls- obtained a leave of absence from
trlct fund*, estimated at $750,000 In his duties in Washington school at
an audit Oklahoma City to serve as sixth
When he finished Judge Vaught district manager for Oomer Smith's
passed sentence Immediately ! campaign for the United States
lAofbourrow. tracing the compli- senate. Mr Jelka wld today that
Smith, fifth district congreaaman.
When the error was disclosed the
member* hurried to Seminole for a|
special meeting with Chairman
W E Orlaao
would announce hts candidacy (or
the senate Saturday night.
Temporary headquarter* for Ca-
nadian county are being establish-
ed at the Kerfoot hotel tn El Reno.
Mr Jelka. formerly a member of
the El Reno hlghschool faculty,
was vice principal and head of the
physical education department in
39—OF Washington school the past term.
H«nl. Williams and Otia ------
Ill Lineup Again uoned by Senator Oeorge Norris
_____ < Nebraska. Independent i who sup-
I ported the 'senior Robert M. La-
Three more veterans of former ■ jcoiirtto when he sought the presl-
rampalgtra have Joined the El | <jency on H Progressive ticket tn
Reno Indians and will be In uni-
form for Sunday's wrap with the jgorrt* who ha* supported Dcmo-
Oklahoma City Gassers Art Jahn, presidential tickets since.
Indian pilot, announced today. no immediate comment on
Roscoe Hunt moundsman who o^rnor phllllp F UFbllette's *n-
toased for the Indian* a part of j IM)UrcPment at Madison. Wts, that
last year, la bark In, the fold once # ninongi progressive party had
kfoln been formed.
Smltty Williams, another veteran _
ha* arrived to try out for Ihr n _ I*.,
receiving prat, and Morgan Otis IvCDriCVC TV OH I »V
Indian shortstop last year. Is wear-
ing the El Reno colors again
First decisive teat of the season
(ondemned Killer
OKLAHOMA CITY. Apr
—Frank Warayn, chief motor vehl- - ■
_ cle inspechv of the state safely de- rpr,||wL i:n Aj
P2SZ7S WiffSj A“J To„P?,ife™en1 pSEpZSS K S ‘ RI Reno Sli,t fd
srriSiS:jrs: May Bring ParoleirrJ^lT ,,pu“ - —
In a report to Commissioner J Shooter* from all part* of the
OKLAHOMA CITY Apr 39-(A5 M oentry. he racommended that *'v,‘r»l of who")
Assistance given officers In aolv- 341 school busses be ordered Junk- net101)1)1 honors, will attend the
Ing other crimes moved the par- M| (M impaired
don and parole board today to rec- „ ,, . ,
rmmend a parole for Herbert Ward Hp ''""'fT, **
so asrvinu thr« AtapahO rural SChOOl dtatrlCt 1(1
the Boy Scouts, was announced to-
day
He will work with troop* In El
Reno, Concho. Calumet and Union
City. Henrv C Coates recently was
promoted from district commission-
er to field executive
Mr. Marsh formerly was Bcout
executive at Altua
A district campoiee will be held
May II and 14 In El Reno. *Vn
Dr. L. R Oonnut will conduct a
court of honor for Ihe purpose of
advancing Brouta who have been
active during the peat three
mouths.
LnTfor 'SSJST* fS>SlSlCu^, ‘ou,“> U* *■ '«
gtmr inspector* found six of the seven
Allen 0 Nichols. Wcwnka. preel- h,"wp* ,n «hf dangerous
dent pro tempore of the state aen- 'De said the school board promised
me Joined Police Chief Jake to rwplracw the equipment at the
Simms of Seminole in recommend- ,,m'* °* IngpggMOB, hut on Apr II
Ing demenry Simms wrote that j °he of the busses classified as
Ward gave him material assistance | "dangerous" skidded and over-
hi breaking up forgery rings and • turned In a ditch, injuring 18 chll-
counterfeiting gang. dim
trapshooting tournament Sunday
afternoon near El Reno. It was an-
nounced today
The corteata will begin at noon
Sunday half a mile south and a
-fourth mile west of the El Reno
country club, and no admission la
charged fnr spectators
The program win constat of ion
dxteen-yard single target* 50
handicap. 16- tn 35-yard rise: and
25 pairs of double*. Ptiar money
will be awarded according to the
Roar system
for the Indians is slated Sunday
afternoon at Leglor park when
the Oklahoma City "kid team" of
last year's state sandlol tourna-
ment will furnish the opposition
Last Sunday the Indians made
a belated rally to down Yukon
14-9 in a practice game, their only
start of the season.
HUNTSVILLE Tex. Apr 3»—UP>
John W Vaughan, condemned
killer who twice haa cheated the
electric chair through what he
termed “acta of Ood." drew a 24-
hour lease on life today.
He hoped It furnished enough
lime to convince some court he
1 was Insane or to obtain a stay
; until the Issue was settled Shortly
at a point about one mile east of
the Bridgeport bridge over the
South Canadian river a collision
occurred between the automobile
In which she was occupant and a
Beatrice Creamery company truck
operated by Stappelman
She claimed Lackey, approaching
from the east, attempted to go
around the truck driven by Step-
pelman. striking the car in which
the plaintiff >ra* riding. She re-
lated the Cox vehicle was thrown
Into a ditch at d demolished.
Eleven Sign Verdict
One Juror. John Ledgerwood. did
not sign the verdict. Others serv-
ing aa jurors were E L Majors.
Henry Yeck. H H McFarland
Floyd Ellison D D Henry. Frank
C Ball. B F filler. A Franz
RoUier. Olenn O Mordv. T. J
Feddersen and E A Oil!
Railroads Order
wmt 1^ j *• iQieman, arcurmi mi
\\ajie Reductions quiumgthe commuaion
OKLAHOMA CITY Apr 29—UP)
Resignations of the entire Okla-
homa public welfare commission
If It cannot find a way to end
Internal dlaaention and speed re-
turn of federal social security funds
was suggested today by two mem-
bers.
Raymond D. Thomas, Oklahoma
A and M college dean, announced
he would retire unless the nine-
member group agreed on policies
Chairman John Bddleman agreed,
"If we can't adjust our dif-
ferences. I think we should all
walk out." Eddleman said
Both Thomas and Eddleman said
federal grants were being withheld
by the social security board while
dlssentlon continued In state com-
mission ranks The federal grants
were withdrawn Mar 1, after in-
vestigation of Ineligible* on the
rolls
Hyde Disagree*
"I don't think any commission
ha* Uit right to stand In, the! way
of 100(100 people who are emi’led
to this relief.'' Bddleman asaerted
O H Hyde. Alva, who heads a
■ action Jn disagreement with Ed-
dleman. declared flatty against
| J C* *i. 1 wmi wr uwir rarara .we-tiiru oihmut CHICAOO. Apr J9—Til*
hnlarired security .before he was to make his second 4 Mortal Ion of American Railroads
n . trip to the death chamber, within „(toptcd « resolution today under
System r rODOSed 1fl8ht d,v* oovernor James V|,hf rallway libor act ^
• r , Allred reprieved him for a day 1 noU(* „f , 18 percent wage re-
WEATHER
WASHINGTON Apr 29 —<4h—
President Roosevelt asked the ao-
rtal security board today to study
methods of llmprovlng the social
security act Inc'udtng liberalisation
and extension of the old age
benefit system
The president told a press con-
feree re he had written A. J, AH-
meyer of the board asking Ural a
revised program be put In shape
for action at the next session
of congress
Mr Roosevelt said he requested
the board lo consider commencing
old age benefit payment* earlier
than Jan 1,
vkled The president also asked 1 * m , 64
larger berrflts for thoae retiring, state of weather, dear.
within the next few years under. Rainfall, none
the pension system and also larger Bun rises tomorrow at 5:15.
benefit* for widow* and children 1 Sun seta today at 6 39
______ perreni wage
Although Vaughan was reprieved, ^..cllon effective Julv 1 for
I Johnny Banka, negro killer who
also won a week's delav a week
ago this morning when Die electric
chair's generator failed to func-
tion. died on schedule
Forecast
Portly cloudy tonight and Sat-
urday: warmer In east and north
portions tonight
El Hem, Weather
For 34-hour period ending at 6
1943 aa now pro-1 g m today: high, 73; low, 54; at R
classes of labor
The cut would represent a saving
Of 1250.000 000 annually Ui
mem - [
her roads
The association stated the wage
cut was necessary because of loss |
of revenue and Increase* in op-
en ting costa
Revenue louse* the association
laid to a decline In traffic, diver-
sion of traffic to competing farm*
of transportation and Inadequacy
01 lira recent freight raise allow-
ed by the interstate commerce
commission
If w* did resign " he queried,
what kind at shape would It leave
Jhe commission In? It iwould mean
that a new outfit would have to
keep this tnefflclant help and the
program would be no belter off
Ilian It I* now"
Roosevelt’s Plans
Mav Be Revived
Mr and Mrs F L Fiinke and
Mr*. L. O. Jackson and sons. Paul
and Donald, of Watonga visited
friend* and relative* In D Reno
Thursday.
WA8HINOT0N. Apr 29 -OF—
Report* circulated In the aenate
today that administration leaders
might try to revive the govern-
ment reorganisation program which
the house recently pigeonholed
Some U) tales lad Jiouaa member*
were understood to have asked
Senator James F Byrrea. <Dem-
ocrat. South Carolina 1 to seek
•enate paaeage of a measure ap.
proved by the house last sum-
mar embodying the key provision
ol a sidetracked legislation It
would permit the praaldenl to re-
shuffle moet federal agendas by
executive order
ae « •
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Dyer, Ray J. The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 47, No. 46, Ed. 1 Friday, April 29, 1938, newspaper, April 29, 1938; El Reno, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc919957/m1/1/: accessed March 28, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.