The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 52, No. 155, Ed. 1 Sunday, August 29, 1943 Page: 4 of 6
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The Ell Reno Daily Tribune
A Bloc Ribbon Newspaper Swing a Blue Ribbon CoansoU)
Issued dally except Saturday from 207 South Rock Island avenue,
and entered as second-class mall matter under the act of March 3, 187*.
RAY J. DYER
Editor and Publisher
BUDGE HARLC
News Editor
DEAN WARD
Advertising
The ASSOCIATED PRESS I* exclusively entitled to the use of re-
pubUcation of all the news dispatches credited to it or not credited by
this paper, and also to all the local news therein.
All tights of publications of special dispatches herein also are reserved.
Inside
the Axis
Favoritism to Which We Ail Subscribe
MEMBER
SOUTHERN NEWSPAPER
PUBLISHERS ASS’N.
MEMBER
OKLAHOMA
ASSOCIATION
DAILY SUBSCRIPTION BATES BY MAIL IN CANADIAN AND
BY CARRIER ADJOIN INC. COUNTIES
One Week ____________4 .20 Three Months____________41 JO
Three Months______________42.25 Six Months----------$3.00
One Year______________48.00 One Year_____________$5.00
Including Bales Tax
SUNDAY, AI'Gl'HT 30. 1M3
WE WILL KEEP GOD'S COMMANDMENTS IE WE LOVE HIM: Them
that love me and keep my commandments.—Ex. 30:0.
Inflation? It’s Here
Presenting Facia
by the Foreign her vice
Division of tbe Office of
War Information
\V?A8HINOTON Aug 28~<8pe-
jW clali — Japanese occupation
authorities who still haven't suc-
ceeded In pacifying the Philippinues.
have decided to send out roving
teams of public speakers in an
attempt to explain Japan's "true
mission" to "misguided'' Filipinos
J the controlled Manila radio dis-
! closed recently
The speakers’ tour, according to
the broadcast. Is part of an inten-
sified "campaign" for the "restora-
tion of peace and order throughout
j the country without further delay "
* * *
1APJANE8F and German propa-
J gandists. In acknowledging the
I collapse of axis resistance In 8lclly.
1 claimed that the evacuation of Italo-
Oerman troops from the Medtter-
TWE stubborn and still indecisive fight against tin* ZmJfmJS*7JBSTSS
tionary spiral" of wages and prices is one of the home tory."
front’s most important battles. And in one sector it is The Japanese propagandists, in
being lost. We have been watching governmental agencies acknowledging the loss of Kiska.
popping away with ceilings and subsidies and Little Steel claimed that the withdrawal of
formulas. But in the meantime another inflationary force j u"’lr lroop'',roni lhp Aleutian island
has broken through, after a stealthy advance, and seema ln workl m,l‘*
* * *
nOMK radio reported recently In
•A n domestic broadens! that Ital- 1
[ lan real estate and livestock prices
dropped precipitously after the
promulgation of the decree order-
J Ing investigation of the personal
I fortunes of Fasefst party members
According to the broadcast, land
I that used to sell for 100 000 lire per
I hectare now brings less than 50,000
lire, while a sheep that used to cost
ubout 650 lire now sells for 450
The broadcast sought to give tt»e
• impression that the government of
Marshal Pietro Badogllo had pulled
some sort of anti-inflation coup
The reduced price may only indi-
cate, however that ready cash is I
not too cnsllv available in Italy or
that wealthy Italians are fearful of
paying the former high prices lest
they be suspected ns ex-Fascist
grafters and profiteers
entrenched beyond any dislodging.
This new inflationary enemy came In when the quality
of necessary gooda was cut. without a corresponding cut
in retail prices. Perhaps economist* might say that in-
flation isn’t the right word, but the results certainly are
inflationary.
You may have noticed it already in things like this:
That suit you bought six months ago fits like a sack and
is lieginning to wear out already. Your toes came through
your new cotton socks after one wearing. Your wife com-
plains that wartime two-way stretches don’t stretch.
Daughter’s new shoes lost most of their color in yester-
day's wearing.
And that's inflation! For you have to replace these
inferior articles so much more quickly that the result is
the same as if you had paid 50 or 100 percent more than
the price of their pre-war eounter|»rts.
• « *
THU principal cause of this difficulty is as easy to explain
as it is hard to solve: the armed forces require most of
our wool and cotton and all of our No. 1 leather: rayon is
needed in synthetic rubber tires; rubber itself, of course,
has gone to war. along with such things as steel and me-
tallic dyes.
Why can’t there he a price reduction to match the
reduction in quality? There are several reasons, but the
chief one seems to be that labor costs have risen. Some
trades, like women’s dresses and cloaks and suits, have been
given |tay increases. In other industries, new and inex-
perienced labor has upped production costa. Thus, many
wholesalers find that, in spite of cheaper materials, they
are paying as much in the end l>ecause of other adjust-
ments. ,
Behind I lie Scenes
In Washington
BV EE IKK l-.DSON
NEA Staff Cm t rspuiidriii
( )' --Canada reputation for developing unusual news wat
* ■* ,n me Quebec conference of Prime Minister Churchill
Prendcni Roosevelt et al. Krr this is the
Hollywood
Film Shop
By Ernest Foster
United Press Correspondent
and nem miracle
A DECREE ordering tlic death
** sentence for all Rumanian
"recruits" who refuse to do military
service “for religious or other rea-
sons' during the remainder of the
war has been published In the Ru-
| inanian Oltictal Journal, according
to tlte Hungarian MTI news agen-
cy
* • *
NJAZI authorities have decreed
, * ’ that foreigners conscripted for
And when there are savings in manufacttiring costs, J labor in Germany must work there
Ill-mi
they are too small to do the consumer much good. For
example, a shirt that used to retail nationally at $2.25 now
sells, with noticeably less cloth and no fast color or pre-
shrunk guarantee, at $2.24!
• * #
J OW-PRICE lines are diaapiiearing in all fields. Mnnu-
4 facturers are concentrating on higher priced goods,
where there is more profit. And buyers, with more money
than ever trefore, are shunning the bargain basements
anyway.
So a good hit of our much-talked-of surplus wealth is
tuting drained off in a wasteful way that doesn’t benefit
anybody.
Several of our usually contentious government bu-
reaus have pondered the situation, and for once they are ; utles over the grave of an assasM-
in complete accord. They all agree that there is no ap- ' noted Dutch Nazi was reported
parent remedy. recently In the controlled Dutch
_ ) newspaper Algemeen Hnndelsblad.
It used to be said an optimist was one who went to ,he lBrR1* number of
<"f.*r°wry wllh “ "»•*••< •**« «"<i»toiiT. n„w „„
optimist is one who goes to the store with a market bas-
ket.
a minimum of two years before they
can be repatriated and then only If
the worker can get a substitute front
his native land to .replace him. ac-
cording to an article in the Swedish
newspaper Nv Dag
The 8wedish paper quoted another
Nazi regulation to the effect that
foreign laborer- may receive a week's
"leave" to be spent In n German
camp after two years of work In
which they have displayed "faith-
fulness to enterprise "
• * a
FUNERAL oration made by
one of Anton Mussert* dep-
A
One important problem has been solved by the army
and navy. Thousands of women no longer have to worry
about what to wear.
by patriotic Netherlands, the dep-
uty, a man named Jager. was
quoted as saying:
"It Is nearly become a custom
to stand at the grave of a mur-
dered Jgatinnal Socialist "
gig ■ - ■ country of miracle-
hi Anne De B< npre; Dr. Locke; the man the
Mounties always get; Dr. Cook, who didnt get to
the North Pole; the unbelievable rescue of all the
flyers who have managed to get lost in the great
north woods; the weather that comes out of the
Medicine Hat; the radium mines; the Yukon gold
ru-h: the magnetic pole: the Dhoukobars and the
Dtonne quintuplets. It was axiomatic that the
nrw s coming out of the Qupbfc conference would
have to lye hette? than all of the old Canadian
standbys combined
Early tapes of the conference were not with-
out their bi/arre moments which gave promise that
Quebec would not let the Dominion down.
Strangest charm ter to appear on the scene was
unquestionably Brendan Bracken, the British Min-
ister of Information who came over with Anthony
I Eden. He turned out to be a tall, husky, pinkfaced
man in hi- forties, pow-sed of a mop of ntanila hemp hair that was
like nothing in the world save Harp. Marx's wig. He wore colorlms
plastic rimmed glasses and also the usual clothes and a dark necktie
with a loose four-in-hand knot that exposed the largest gold-headed
col lar button ever mined He punctuated his remarks with a "yas"
and "yaw" whenever lie was hunling for a word or collecting hi*
thought?, though the phrases seemed to roll out endlessly and effort-
lessly in what appeared to be a studied mannerism of trying to be
constantly smart.
Hi* *ct h'* first press conference held in the old city hall 24
hours after his arrival, was pretty much of a flop. He opened with a
few on-the-record trite remarks which he later admitted were mellow
platitude- such os: "News of the Quebec conference is scarcer than
water in the Sahara Do rrt ” Later he answered qustions off the rec-
ord because, as he said, his Ix>rd and Master was a censor and he
always carried one with him When the correspondents insisted on
pinning him down he annoyingly wanted to correct every phrase and
change 0 comma here and there because "too many purple passages
spoil any article” Tim prime minister was living very much his usual
life af the Citadel because he was not "one of those perpetual busy-
bodies called an early riser.”
Tin- war, he said, was going very well, indeed, yaw. After It was
over the correspondents agreed they’d take Elmer Davis any day
I < •
|)RIN(’ESS ALICE, wife of the Earl of Athlone, governor genernl of
Canada, revealed herself as just another candid ramcra hound.
When the press photographers were shooting pictures of the Presi-
dent. the prime ministers, generals, admirals, and marshals on the
terrace at the Citadel, Her Excellency stepped out of the picture, got
down on one knee with the photographers and shot a few exposures
herself with a mini-camem she pulled out pf her handbag. That ses-
sion of picture taking lasted nearly an hour The President took it,
but Mr. Churchill became impatient at all the posing. "Oh. don't let
this bother you,” the President finally told him, "when Hull get.*
here we ll have all thi^ lo go through, g^gin ”
- — m*---<t—rJKBar—*----—
With no many forms und taxes for business, now-
adays friend husband can work late at the office and
mean it.
The fur coat Heaaon begins when the wife reminds
the husband he spent $50 for n fishing- outfit last summer
to catch a 50-cent fish.
Down Memory I^ane
Aug. 28, 1918
Mrs. T. M. Aderhold, who underwent an operation at
the sanitarium two weeks hko, was able to he removod
home yesterday.
Dale Stock will attend the state university this winter.
A ur. 29. 1933
More than 50 members of the junior chamber of com-
merce gathered at Darlinjrton state ynme farm last nipht
for a Dutch lunch and social moetiiiR.
Miss Irene March, foreign language instructor of El
Reno highschool, returned yesterday from New York City
where she completed work on her master’s degree during
the past summer term at Columbia university.
Mr. and Mrs. R. H. McPherson, sons, J. R. and In-
voice. of Tipton, were overnight guests vesterdav of Mrs.
McPherson’s brother. A. D. Cox. and Mrs. Cox. 209 South
Rock Island avenue.
Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Moiire, 520 South Hoff avenue.
u*re among the group of 25 who enJoyed an all-day “get-
together" yesterday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. John
Brown in Chickasha.
Mrs. C. D. McQuown, daughter, Murthu Dean, uiid
Mrs. Charles Sypert of Oklahoma ORy were guests of Mr
and Mrs. J. J. Cantley, 916 South Kofik Island avenue.
Mrs. H._ 0. Skinner, daughter, Miss Margaret,
Hyafter
Harry, nnd Mrs. II. R. ftltinner returned today
week visit with relatives in McAllen, Tex
son,
a two-
Collegi Suspends
Humor Magazine
STTULWATTR. Auk 38 .Special'
—Suspension of the publication of ]
the Agglevator. Oklahoma A and !
M. rolleae humor magazine, has
been announced by Clement E.
Trout, chairman of the board of
student publications
The magazine, heretofore publish-
ed during the fall and spring semes-
ter*. served as a sort of house or-
gan for the college students. Hie
publication carried Jokes about the
students, rosaip of both faculty and
students, nnd In general fostered
the Idee of cooperation between
Oreek organizations. Independents
and faculty members
Dearth of national advertising.
Public Records
Charley A. and Viola Shawn Lot
34. block 3. Fair addition to El
Reno
Guardian's Deed
Mary L Morrison guardian of the
|_JOLLY WOOD Aug 28—<UR>-As
* * a newspaper reporter in her
latest picture Gloria Holden doesn't
sit on the boss' desk and display
her mighty pretty pah- of legs.
And that’s an innovation that
probably wUl provoke cheers front
workim: newspapermen and women
when they see her In RKO-Radio's ;
"Behind the Rising Sun "
She port rays a vastly experienced j
foreign correspondent in the film
i She thought she won the part be- 1
cause she resembles Marjorie Young,
wife of James R. Young, Tokyo cor- I
respondent, on whose book the pic- |
ture Is based.
Actually she got the part because
she is Gloria Holden and suited to
it.
8he doesn't sit on the boss' desk, j
wisecrack or use unladylike lan- !
guagp She doesn’t chew gum,
1 guzzle gin or use feminine wiles in I
getting a story. She partly smokes
! a rigaret
Name any or all of the faults'
newspaper people have found in
previous portrayals of newspaper
people on the screen and you'll
find them missing in her perform-
ance.
Gloria demonstrates, however,
how to be glamorous As she goes
through her strenuous scenes she
doesn't always look as if she had
just left a beau tv shop. If her hair
should be mussed It Is mussed
Her hair Is dark brown and so \
j ar<" her eyes. To add to her char- j
acterlzatlon of a woman in her1
middle 30s she added an intrig- '
utng streak of gray through the i
center of the hair. She likes It I
and plans to keep it afterward In j
real life.
'*It'a given me sex appeal." she
savs. "Or. at least, so many people
j have discovered that I have sex '
appeal since I started wearing the
gray streak that I'm determined to
wear it all the time.”
Gloria tints her toenails In real
Farm News
and Views
By Associated Press
QKLAHOMA CITY, Aug. 28—(/P)
^ —Many dairy cows In Okla-
homa will not receive their full
allowance of feed this winter, but
everything possible must be done
to feed them as well as herd own-
ers can under the circumstances.
That suggestion comes from Joe
C. Scott, president of the state
board of agriculture. In discussing
protein shortages and other feed
problems confronted by Oklahoma
dairymen.
“It Is estimated that the dairy
Industry in Oklahoma amounts to
$150,000,000 per year.” 8cott said.
"It would be a calamity If this In-
dustry should be crippled severely,
as will be the case If too many of
our dairy cows are sold or slaught-
ered.
"Every person who helps Increase
milk and cream production this
fall and winter Is serving the war
effort and backing up our armed
forces. We have a task before us
and we cannot afford to shirk in
face of odds against us.
"A dairy cow that weighs 800
pounds and gives an average of
twb and one-half gallons of milk
per day for 10 months will require
the following feed for one year:
"One acre of tame pasture, one
to three acres of native pasture,
one ton of legtune hav. one ton of
grans hay, three tons of silage that;
is equal to about one ton of dry
hay. 25 bushels of ground oats. 16
bushels of corn or kafir meal. 1,000
pounds of bran. 600 pounds of cot-
tonseed meal
“The feed that Is hardest to ob-
tain U concentrates — particularly
high-protein concentrates such os
cottonseed meal and bran. These
are both scarce and costly. To I
help make up for this shortage,
dairymen will have to use more
legume hay and legume pasture, j
Grass hav is also better If cut In
| the early bloom stage
"At any rate, he said, dairymen
should mow and put up ,hay of
any kind wherever It Is to be
found—along fence rows, creek
banks, roadwavs. More liberal
feeding of roughages must be the
slogan for the coming winter i
While roughage alone will not pro-
duce as much milk as a properly '
balanced rating of roughage and
grain feeds; still, it will allow us
to keep the cows and produoe what
milk and cream we can. Just!
keeping our dairy cows is very Im-
portant for the future of Okla-
homa agriculture."
* * *
/^ROWING and using of soybeans
Is slowly but gradually grow-
in favor In Oklahoma, says Miss
Martha McPheters, extension foods
specialist of Oklahoma A. and M
college. The extension service re-
cently has had manv requests for
using and canning edible varieties
of sovbeans.
Soybeans mav be canned either
green or dried. However, the
green soybeans make a better
product both in flavor and color I
Sunday, August 29, 1943
( allege Expects
Heavy Enrolment
8TTLLWATER. Aug. 28— (Special!
I —Enrolment at Oklahoma A. and
| M. college will be good despite the
j war if transcripts received and in-
I quirles are any indication, actord-
1 ing to Herbert Patterson, dean of
administration.
“The office of admissions 1^ busy
with correspondence with prospec-
i live students." stated the dean, "and
i transcripts have been sent in from
many students who have Just grad-
uated from highschool and students
who are transferring from Junior
| colleges or universities."
Catalogs are being aent out with
the announcements for the 1943-44
school year.
The chief clerk’s office Is receiv-
ing a number of inquiries on room
and board situations as well as de-
posits for rooms In the halls for wo-
men.
This year men students will live
in private homes as men's dormitor-
ies have been turned over to service
personnel in training at the col-
lage
"The opening date. Sept. IS prom-
ises on enrolment beyond that ex-
pected in wartime." stated Patter-
son.
Business Men's Squads
Help Out in Hospital
PHILADELPHIA, Aug. 28—(UJB—
The tired business man who directs
hundreds of workers during the day
now spends his after-office hours
running elevators, cleaning floors
and making beds
The "V" squad at Jewish hospi-
tal. comprised of 42 business and
professional men, accepts any job
that has to be done at the institu-
tion—reyard less of how menial, and
without waiting to be told.
Attired In his white uniform
with a “V" sewn on the sleeve, each
man does a specific Job for six
weeks, then is shifted to another
task. Before they took up the work,
the volunteers received a 10-week
training course from doctors, nurses,
dietitians and. the administration
staff.
The men enthusiastically respond-
ed to an appeal by Charles Kahn,
a hospital trustee, who ts hitnself
a volunteer worker. In fact, so
many offered their services In the
plan to relive the shortage of non-
medical assistants that there is
now a waiting list of 108 men.
Hospitals throughout the coun-
try, Including Johns Hopkins at
Baltimore, have requested Kahn to
give them information concerning
the program. Some hospitals have
already put the plan Into effect.
Look and Learn
does quinquennb
SCOOPED ON OWN NEWS
8T ALBANS. Vt—(U»—"It's at
vour house " That was the answer
Bess Donnelly, St Albans Dally
Messenger reporter, got when she
telephoned the fire department lo
learn where the fire was
1. What
mean?
2. How many books are there 1
the Old Testament?
3. Who was known as the "Bar
of Avon?"
4. In what wav Is the age of
horse estimated?
5. What is the widow of a kin
called?
ANSWERS
L Recurring once in. or lastini
five years.
2 Thirty-nine books.
3. Shakespeare
4. By Its teeth
5. Queen dowager
1 -
■-
EASTERN STATE
—•
Marriage Licenses __# ___________....
Ray E Reaves. 30. and Mac estates of Kathryn Lee Sanders. U!e‘ but th*v wont show ln *he
Reaves. 30 both of Oklahoma City Doris Marie Sanders and Charlene p ,urr and ,he war* n° finger
Charles Floyd Allen. 28. of Flnnd- Banders, to Ethel Lair One-ninth nai P014*11 ■
reau. 8 D . and Carrie Lee Ashford NE 27-11-7
21 of Bokchtto Power of Attorney
James W Price, 42. and Edith Murray Gordon to Mildred Chase coat she wears while covering the
Her wardrobe Is not extensive
or elaborate There* a trench
Coleman. 40. both of Oklahoma City. 1 Qordon
William Turman. 29. and Ruby
Florence Seaton 22. both of Okla-
homa City. ,
Clen Isom Smith. 25. and Alta
Roberta Haas. 21. both of Calumet
route 2
Civil Halt
Parent-Teacher Topics
Designated for Year
Japanese Invasion of China, a
tweed coat and suit—all of which
she hopes to keep for her private
life wardrobe
NORMAN. Aug. 28— (Special)—
First National bank of Hinton vs T*"* ^ b>’
Hzle Hoaelton Suit for money ,U* P -r. A war
judgment on promissory note *urlng th' comlng vfar' Mias Alice
Warranty Deed, SOW'r* professor of family life ed-
^ Same 8 Earl to Margaret Harm* ““Uon “l th* Un‘v'r“^ ot °k^
sald Troute, has caused the suspen- i Ij0tll e 7 fltu1 . hlork «« homn and state chairman, has an-
slon of the coming year However ,ddlUon Yukon nounoed They are health and
he tmiUnu^ the m.gaaine again R«lpl, and Maude Heltaman to “‘ely' ho,ne #nd ,BmUy nn(1
will be^ published when funds are Car, c altf] ^ Uv#nw, Nlcholv Juvenile protection
Lota 28. 27 and 38 block 1. Fhlr addl- 8he voiced the hope that each
tlon to El Rano, unit will adopt the subject coat
El Reno Federal Savings and IiOan ''«e<*ed by the community
available.
12-Year-Old (Jirl la
Handy Around House
ANTLERS, Aug. 28—(UP)—Twelve-
year-old Barbara Hardey of Push-
mataha county has canned over
150 quarts of food this year In
addition to keeping house, caring
for two younger brothers, nnd
kepelng 120 baby chlokens while
her mother was In bed because
of a broken leg.
MOKE DEAD THAN ALIVE
NDfem FWtRTBBtTtO. Vt.—(U.E
There are more dead than alive
In this mountain village Grave-
atone* in the town* huge oente-
trrv f,r ouinnmher the 77(1 odd
1 la tlon to George C. and Ellen
Rice Edgar Lot* 19 and 20. block
72. El Reno
J I Penwrlght et nl to Chester
H and Florence M Itolllns Lou
47 and 48. block 3. Riley's addition
to El Reno.
C. L and Cordia Duff to E. R and
Josephine Darland Lota 6 and 7.
block 19, Fair addition to El Reno
Arthur D. and Angie Watta to
Charley A. Shawn. Lots 33
Modern EfiqueHe
Q la It necessary, when dining
at a friend's home, to thank the
maid every time she passes a dish?
A. No. this is not expected
Q Should a man write "Mr.
( --------, .. uuu H and Junes Smith' when algiUng his
33 block 3. Fair addition to El Reno name to a social letter?
Qultrtalm Deeds A. No; the prefix should 1m
J. I. Penwrlght et al to Cheater i knitted.
H and Florence M Hollins Lou Q In what way can undesirable
46 and 48, block 3. Riley* addition members be k«H out Of a club?
to FI Reno A. B" careful lnve*tl»*Mon bv
Aithui U. and Atvjlo WuiLi to the member-hip eomotlHee,
Be Kind to Messenger,
He May Be Grandpa
YOUNOBTOWN. Ohio, Aug 28-
<UJ°—Voungatown residents have
been asked to be kind to the West-
ern Union messenger "boy"—he
mav be somebody* grandfather
Because many older men. long
retired from active work, wanted
to do their part to aid the war ef-
fort, It took only a little prodding
by th« war manpower commission
! to put them, many of them grand-
fathers, on the messenger staff at
[ the Western Union telegraph of-
flees here.
Company officials report thattha
new "bovs” are more efficient, be-
cause they nre not Inclined to go
off the beaten path and stop by
the wayside between deliveries.
Since the uniforms of their
younger cohoru do not fit, and it
would be dangerous for the older
men 4o ride Mkes. tlgev wear their
civilian - lotties and ride buser
But. proud of the part they are
taking In releasing younger men
for war work, the Western Union
1—. h*>-’ Ae*n,n*-1 and received.
Ladies tr, distltvpdsh ihrnisrivrv
HORIZONTAL
l Depicted tale.
9 Eminent
10 Scalier
12 llarein
13 Catcher of
reL
15 Road .-boulder
IK Universal
L'lngunge
17 Allot noon
(nbbr.)
18 Me.idnw*
20 R0.1t ini;
22 Theme
23 Rihlhol
pronoun
24 Music note
25 Tier
28 Do. tor (abbr.)
27 Arrn measure
.*8 New H.'.mp-
shire (abbr.)
So Symbol for
germanium
31 Suitor
33 Upward
34 Draws dose to
Answer to Previous Puzzle
]c OBJ T JC 1 Wp
JF ATM.:, (St a
Id a p tT"g Al E. Al
PT
A PE
L AR >
AT' “
MLLE
;D EL
A P?_
HAfMGE
Et8j. [OR E
S T'P A?nI)
:•« Celerity
(8 Great Lake
39 Be quiet!
40 Negative
42 Exploit
43 Genus of
palms
45 Bridle straps
47 Contemn
49 Gu-t
50 One of its
cities is-
VERTICAL
1 Regular
2 Greek letter
3 Kind of dam...........
4 Juium Doctor 37 Dispatched
11 Cry
12 Withered
14 Incursion
15 One ol its
manufactur-
ing cities is
19 Grated
harshly ov«
21 Fume*
22 Precept
25 Rodent
29 Wife of Zei
(myth.i
30 European
kingdom
32 Vegetable
33 Indian*
35 Ventilates
(abbr »
5 Right ride
1 abbr. |
6 Plum part
7 Before
8 Color
9 Roman
emperor
39 Hindu
garment
41 Shield bear
44 Mountain p
46 Dine
48 New Zealat
(abbr.)
49 Kind of sh
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Dyer, Ray J. The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 52, No. 155, Ed. 1 Sunday, August 29, 1943, newspaper, August 29, 1943; El Reno, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc920314/m1/4/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.