The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 58, No. 267, Ed. 1 Tuesday, January 10, 1950 Page: 3 of 8
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!
Oklehoioa His tor* tor.! S
State Capitol,
OSlahona. CU;j, Okla.
The El Reno Daily Tribune
Single Copy Five Cents
MJ.PJ MEANS UNITED PRESS
El Reno, Oklahoma, Tuesday, January 10, 1950
(/PI MEANS ASSOCIATED PRESS
Fund Campaign
Being Mapped
By Red Cross
Preliminary Plans
Are Completed By
Board of Directors
Preliminary plans for the annual
financial drive were made Monday
night at a dinner meeting of the
board of directors of the Canadian
county Red Cross at the El Reno
Country club, it was reported to-
day by Tommy Bateman, publicity
director.
The drive will be conducted dur- I
ing the month of March, The goal 1
for this year's drive lias not yet ]
been announced.
Principal speaker for the meet- j
ing was Paul Updegraff, Norman, j
member of the district board of
directors with jurisdiction over 30
Red Cross chapters. * . I
Updegraff discussed the findings j
of a survey made recently of a I
number of armed services camps |
and hospitals.
The survey was made to obtain
first hand information on assist-
ance now being given by the Red
Ci oss to service men and their
families and how the assistance
can be unproved.
Activities Mentioned
Mrs. William L. Fogg gave a re-
port on the activities of the chap- i "*d *,*0<K* Creek Indian said
Chamber Opening Drive
For Additional Members
A drive for new members for
the El Reno chamber of com-
merce will get underway at 7:30
a. m. Wednesday with a kickoff
breakfast in the Oxford cafe, it
was announced today by Warren
DeMoss, chamber president.
DcMoss pointed out that the
drive will be to enrol firms or
persons who did not hold mem-
bership in the chamber during
1949 The continuous member-
ship plan was inaugurated last
year and persons who signed
pledge cards during 1949 are still
members n ss they have sub-
mitted v i resignations.
Goal oi the drive, which is ex-
pected to be completed in two
days, is 50 new members, W. H.
Hardwick, drive chairman, said.
Hardwick has selected 25 cham-
ber members to assist him in the
drive, and all members of the
Help Unwanted
By Aged Indian
Two Granddaughters
Think Differently
TULSA. Jan. 10—(U.P>—A 98-year-
committee are expected to attend
the breakfast Wednesday morn-
ing.
DeMoss stated that if the 50
new members are secured it will
bring the chamber membership
to 425 or the greatest in the his-
tory of the organization.
Roy A. Stafford, secretary-
manager, pointed out that the
annual chamber banquet will be
held Thursday night, Jan. 19.
and urged all members to report
as soon as possible if they will
be able to attend.
Stafford also announced that
the policy and projects commit-
tee, headed by Earl Barnes, will
hold a meeting at 7 p.m. tonight
in the chamber office.
Ideas and suggestions for the
1950 program, received during the
past week, will be discussed. Final
reports also will be made.
today he doesn't need any help
from relatives in his love affair.
But two granddaughters of Wil-
liam G. "Billy” Bruner think dif-
ferently. They have asked a Tulsa
county court to appoint a guardian
for the wealthy old man to protect
him from a designing woman.
Mrs. Harrictte Isley and Mrs.
Annabelle Cates are asking Judge
to declare Bruner
ter. particularly those of the can-
teen service. The canteen workers,
she said, assisted in the flood
which covered a wide area on the
north edge of town last spring: in
the horse sale at Fort Reno; with
the state highway patrol safety
truck's appearance here, and the
Pearl Harbor dance sponsored by
the national guard at Fort Reno.
She also stated that the 10 vol- j Wulltr Marks
uiiteer staff workers served 1.086 incompetent,
hours during the past year and Relatives testified yesterday that
that eight administrative staff iBlull0r has given an agricultural
workers served 485 hours in the lease 0,1 8® acres of laud in Tulsa
past six months. ! county to a woman who also signed
A total of 2.725 patients have !her name "Bruner " The land, and
been served cake and ice cream i houses on it, is valued by attorneys
by the canteen workers in the jat *80,000.
past year. Certificates Refused
Extra Sen-ice Discussed Mrs. Cates SMid Bruner and the
Under the heading of extra vol- woman have been refused health
China To Get
War Supplies
Tanks, Armored Cars
Are Loaded Today
PHILADELPHIA. Jan 10-1,TV-
Ninety carloads of tanks and ar-
mored cars consigned to the Chi-
nese government at Formosa were
loaded aboard a Turkish freighter
at a Philadelphia pier today.
Officials of the Reading company
disclosed that'the tanks and cars
were transported over Reading 1
lines from "somewhere in Ohio” to
a pier along the Delaware river in
Port Richmond, located in the
northeastern section of Philadel-
phia.
Clamor For
Economy Is
Heard Today
But Observers See
Scant Reduction
In National Deficit
WASHINGTON. Jan. 10 —(A*)—A
Congressional economy clamor grew
louder today around President Tru-t
man's $42,000,000,000 out-of-balancq
budget.
Nearly all the senators and house
members were saying openly of
behind their hands that spending
will be too high. The deficit will be
too big and they ought to get out
the ax and go to work on the
budget.
Yet in years past all that talk of ’
economy in January often hag
turned out to be still just that In
June—still just talk. And some law-
makers are aware that this year's
economy campaign also could turn
out to be more talk than action.
View Summarized
Senator George Aiken (Republi-
can, Vermont) summed up that
point of view:
"I had been anticipating a deficit.
And it is going to be difficult to
pare it any in this election year. We
may be able to make some reduction
but not to any great extent.”
Nor were there any loud calls for
a hefty tax increase, or even for
the "moderate" one Mr. Truman
keeps asking for. A tax boost would
help blot out some of the $5,133,000.-
000 in red ink that's In prospect
for the year starting next July 1.
Sentiment Sounded
Sentiment seemed to be running
COMMEMORATIVE MONUMENT—'The Cimarron Cowboy." a commemorative monument (indi-
cated to the preservation of a colorful and vital history of northwest Oklahoma, arrived last week in
Freedom. The 13.000-pouud granite slab was made in Woodward at the direction tf the Cimarron Cow-
boys association. It will be dedicated officially in the spring by Governor Roy J. Turner. (Associated Press
photo.)
Work Is Slated
On VA Hospital
Construction Will
Cost $8,000,000
the other way. toward a cut in taxes,
if anything.
Furthermore, it looks as if that
$5,133,000,000 deficit might be big-
Loading w*is begun this mornimr i ,than Mr Truman counted on. _j ne veterans aounmisirauon said j
, af un tl s moming He based his estimate partly on an l()d,v ronKtruptinn r>r it* tannnnnn
>oard the ft (177-trm froioi.t/Nv r s ______ ... *... ... ___„ M>aay construction oi its sb.ooo.uoo
idea that congiess would up mail 500-bed hospital here will be start-
rates by $395,000,000. ed sometime in July.
OKLAHOMA CITY. Jan. 10—</Pi
—The veterans administration said
If congress fails to provide part Announcement of plans was I
unteer service, the chapter at
Christmas time took to the Will
Rogers hospital 200 pocket edi-
tion books. 20 strings of Christmas | marry her grandfather for
lights and four cartons of tree 1 money.
certificates needed to get an Okla-
homa marriage license. She told
Marks the woman Is trying to
his
aboard the 8,077-ton freighter S. S.
Mardin. owned by Maria T. A. S.
of Istanbul. Turkey.
Agents.for the ship. B. H Sobel- i or an 0f the increase, the deficit made bv Emorv Gale actinir man" 1
man and Comptny. Inc., said the -m B0 UD just thflt ' h made “no‘? °ae' aclUnB man'
ship will deDart next week The ! „ g0 Up JU“ tnat mucn- ager of the VA office here, after 1
s p in aepaii next week, me some congressmen are saying a conference with Rnv f nunrH
agents declined to give detailed In- the ^resident lind hetter not hank f conference witn Roy E. Guard,
formation on the eonsiimment clot tnC preMdent ,lnd belter not bank Washington, chief of tile VA
inl io^n" 'L?^: lotting some of the newer parts architectural division
of his program—like health msur- Bids will be received in late
ance. Pigeonholing them is one way spring or early summer and the
they could trim the spending pro- contract awarded immediately, '
posed in the budget. ' Gale ...ald
ing company policy prohibits release
of any news reports to the press.
Intensive investigation of all
sources in Philadelphia failed to
unearth such facts about the pur-
chase as to who is making the pay-
decora lions. . Bruner kept court spectators menu and in Wbat.UfiC of cur-
Thirty-two gifts were sent to laughing with droll remarks. "I {rency.
the Carter home for children near think the Indian department is all The Mardin was built in 1918,
Ardmore. The gifts were bought the guardian I should have to the ship agents said,
by Mrs. Wayne England and wrap- f001 with.” he said. He said there Formosa, an Island situated off
ped by Girl Scouts under the di- 16 no sense paying a guardian $100 the coast of China, is headquarters
reetton of Mrs. Eugene Vorhes. a month when he could use the; for Chinese Generalissimo Chiang
Mrs. Thompson Gilbert an- money himself. Kai-shek’s nationalist government,
nounced that Friday of this week Asked if he plans to be married, In Lima. Ohio, Lieutenant Col-
the canteen workers will serve I “Maybe, if I live long enough." he one! R. B. Fontaine, commander of
cake and ice cream to patients in i said with a smile. I the Lima ordnance depot, said the
Will Rogers hospital as usual. “Has anyone talked to you about tanks and armored cars being
- a will?" one attorney asked him. shipped to Formosa were provided
Bruner did not understand. by the Luna depot.
"Last Word" Spoken ---
"Ask him if he has 'spoken his t
last word'." another attorney sug- 1
nested. The "last word" means
Miner Viewing
Court Action
Heating of Home
Brings Controversy
Rise Shown
In Tax Total
“wiir in the Indian language.
Another $84,399 was added to the "Not yet," Bruner answered,
county s tax collection books during Bruner said that if he must have
the past week, it was reported today u g,lardian - but I don't want one"
by Miss Helen March. Canadian lt ghould ^ -jona*." Hc meant
Coal Strike
Is Spreading
county treasurer.
Rev. Jonas L.
Indian
Charles Waichekauskas. a miner
PITTSBURGH. Jan j£ ” ^tThe
Walkouts by soft coal miners today job yeslerday because other miners
spread to three more steel com- | would not work with hlm.
par.ies which operate coal pits. I _ „
idle in T^le 56-year-°ld miner s wife said
seven states In the unexplained her husband intends to look for
walkouts. , another Job flr^t.
At least 30,000 western Pennsyl- ! "M>' husband is going to use
_ , .. . . vania miners now are Idle. About every labor channel he can to get
But they Mid he was pardoned by | 7 200 slopped work at "captive", | Into some other union," Mrs.
Miss March still has a large stack President William McKinley, who or „on-commereUl, mines this Waichekauskas said. "If he doesn't
of payments received through the served from 1897 to 1901. morning. The number of idle Ala- I succeed we’ll decide later whether
banks which her staff has not yet relal^es al“ le*t^1fd Bruner bftmg miners ra e frorn 5000 ^ to take legal action.”
6.000. When WaichekausKas reported
In Virginia. 2.300 striking miners I for work at Lumachi Coal company
returned to work. That left only | mine No. 2 yesterday, his foreman.
250 still out at one mine. The ! Eugene Gavlllet. told him: "Charlie.
The hospital will be located on \
, Northeast 13th street on a nine- j
'acre’ pfrit arid will be 10 stories.
j The hospital will form part of the ;
1 city’s medical center.
I In the same area will be Uni- 1
versify hospital and the new Ok-
lahoma Medical Research Found-
ation hospital now under con-;
1 struction.
The hospital was first earmark-
jed for 1.000 beds but President
COLLINSVILLE. 111., Jan. 10— Truman ordered the reduction In j
ttl.Ri—A Collinsville coal miner to- a curtailment of VA expenditures
day considered the possibility of | last year. It will be the largest VA
legal action against a Progressive | hospital in the state. Muskogee has
Mine Workers union local which 1 a 350-bed capacity hospital.
Gale said the 220-bed VA hospi-
tal at Will Rogers field will be
deactivated with the opening of
the new hospital.
Gale said he had no information
concerning plans for a proposed
VA hospital in Norman
Did You Hear
——o-
JOAN AVANT of El Reno, a
” sophomore In the school of
commerce at Oklahoma A. and
M. college in Stillwater, recently
was pledged by the college chap-
ter of Alpha Chi Omega, na-
tional social sorority.
-0-
John Ternius and Franklin
Williams, El Reno students in
the University of Oklahoma at
Norman, will appear with the
O. U. choir in two concerts
Thursday. An afternoon pro-
gram is scheduled at Ada high-
school and an evening concert
will be presented at Wewoka
highschool. The 56-volce organ-
ization, directed by Chester L.
Francis, appears before nianv
Oklahoma audiences each year.
Ternius, an engineering sopho-
more, and Williams a fine arts
senior student, both sing tenor.
Two Held On
Liquor Count
Volume 58, No. 267
Russia Moving
To Oust China
In UN Council
Communist Regime
Asks Expulsion Of
Nationalist Group
BV ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Soviet union is continuing
her diplomatic campaign to un-
seat nationalist China in the
united nations.
The UN security council holds its
first 1950 meeting today and. with
nationalist China's T. F. Tsiang
In the chair, Russia, it is antl-
| cipated, will let fly a barrage of
! objections.
The Chinese Communist regime
I in a series of messages has asked
I the council to expel the nationalist
! delegation.
Five of the 11-nation council
have recognized the Chinese Com-
i munist regime — Russia. Britain,
Yugoslavia. India and Norway.
The United States, although still
recognizing the nationalists. Is In
the midst of a controversy with
Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek's
Formosa regime over the shelling
of the American freighter Flying
Arrow yesterday by nationalist
warships off Communist-held
Shanghai.
Destroyers Alongside
Two U. S. destroyers arc now
alongside the Flying Arrow rend-
! ering assistance. She was attacked
| in international waters. The na-
tionalist navy said the Flying Ar-
Perry Men First
To Feel Whiplash
row was shelled to save her from
more extensive damage in mine-
sown waters of the Shanghai ap-
proaches.
In Bangkok. Thailand iSiamt
Vice Admiral Russell S. Berkey.
OKLAHOMA PITY Ian 1(1 miP) commander °f the U. S. seventh
OKLAHOMA CITY, Jan. task force, said the U. S. navy will
-Two Perry men. first to feel the protect shlppmg on thc
whiplash of federal intervention in high seas but- not lnside chlnese
the battle to enforce Oklahoma's territorial waters
newly-enacted bone dry law. are Ma>cow announced last ni ht
under grand Jury Indictment today that Russtan voters win elect mem.
(for hauling tax-paid whiskey into of the gupreme ^ of the
11» , j ‘ , , , , . . USSR., the nation's two-house
A federal jury handed down the parliainent, March 12 ^ ,ast
| Indictments yesterday against Ben electlon wa4 Keb 9 1Jm n u
Elmer Shaw and Bill Rome WU- slngle slate of comn^t and
la"’s J . ! non-party Bolshevik bloc candi-
The pair was arrested Nov 25 by dates
■ highway patrolmen after a hot Jap Leader Expelled
chase over dirt roads in Kay county. Communist party today
Seized were 12 gallons or whiskey eXp«Ued Ko Nakanlshi, a top lead-
allegedy bought in Kansas u, Io|lowlllg ^ recent. Comintern.
Statute Revived Journal blast at Japanese Com-
The suspects wi re riding in a car munltt leadership. Nakanlshi, one
given by the government to Wil- of lhe six Comnlun|st members in
lllall1K' a w«rki w“r II veteran and the upper house of
double amputee. was charged with
The federal action is authorized
| by a state statute killed by the 1947
parliament,
having made
“an open attack on the party."
In London, British Prime Mhii-
he said deprived him of his Job
j because he plans to heat his new
home with gas instead of coal.
Partridge,
w^bTSy^rS ^county =
fore the first half deadline. Jan. 1, 1 Relatives said Bruner was once
through county banks but had not! sentenced to federal prison on
been entered previously on'the of-|chaiges of killing a U. 8. marshal,
ficial books.
had time to record. [ used to carry five notches on
In all $528,877.22 has been put on gun
the books but Miss March estimated
that many thousands of dollars have
been received but not recorded. No
penalty is attached to those un-
recorded payments which were
made through banks prior to the
Jan. 1 deadline.
his
Theft Staged
At Station
Damage Suit
Lodged Here
In a damage action filed in Ca-
nadian county district court by E.
G. Moss, judgments totaling $11,-
Vehicles Damaged
In Collisions
Property damage was caused in
traffic accidents reported to the
police department Monday and to-
day, according to records in the
office of Lee Harvey, chief of po-
lice.
A 1949 model sedan driven east
on Watts street by Mrs. Virgic M.
Vance, 900 South Wilson avenue, |aw ^ duc for testing soon. It
legislature but revived in the last ster clement Attlee told his cabl
session. It empowers federal of- net Britain's big official secret to-
ficers to enforce a 1936 federal law fiay: ^ date of the flrst national
which promises protection to dry election in five years,
states asking for help. Tomorrow he Is expected to let
Federal authorities announced last the natlon ln u Word spread
October after a conference with quicklv that Peb a is the most
state officials that they would file tii^ely date.
test cases in each of Oklahoma's The session of parliament sched-
throe federal districts. A similar llIed for Jan 24 wtu ^ cancellpd
case has been filed at Tulsa but it nie present parliament will be
has not yet reached a grand jury dissolved without ever meeting
Another Test Due
Another federal action under the
again.
will
ran into the rear of a 1942 model
truck, owned by the city of El
Reno, which was being operated
by H A. Calvert. 38. of 511 West
Owens street, at 9 a. m. today
Tile mishap occurred wh.n Cal-
vert stopped the truck near the
intersection of Moore avenue in
order to pick up a street sign.
564.92 areJ being sought against D»rnage to the front of the auto- —violates Oklahoma's 1949 sacra- P°ria-
Lloyd White and William Allen mo*>*e was estimated at *85 while niental wine law Porta asserted that the simple
Both men are free on bond—Shaw wills as prepared by attorneys pro-
Wills, Taxes
Are Topics
Wills and income taxes were Hie
topics discussed today noon al the
volume—"except for scientific, weekly luncheon meeting of thc El
medicinal or mechanical purposes" Lions club by A Francis
be a civil action to confiscate 88
cases of whiskey seized from Fletch-
er Handley. Kingfisher.
The Indictment against Shaw and
Williams states that transporation
into the state of liquor containing
more than 4 percent alcohol by
White and William Allen
Gregory, according to records ln
thc office of Frank Taylor, court
clerk.
The petition was filed as the rc-
theie was no damage to the truck,
officers said.
A 1939 model sedan driven west
on Watts by Bob Allen, 30, of 915
South Gresham avenue, struck the
under $1,500. Williams $500
seven reopened mines are owned I I’ll have to send you home. The
by the Cllnchfleld Codl corpora- other men refuse to work witti ] suit of a highway mishap which 7ea~r~of~a 194*7 modersedan oper-
tion. About 70 men at one Ken- you." occurred at 9:30 p. m. June 20, atwj wesl by L A Chappell 60
lucky mine resumed work, leaving 1 - - - - '“■1Q “ •—*“* — —■“***
The 'JYxaci service station one- , 5.000 still out.
Miss March has spent a good pari half mile cast of thc "Y." southeast Miners failed to show up on the
of her time during thc past week of El Reno, operated by Jack Wil- second day of the strike at some
preparing the W-2 income tax I kerson, was burglarized early this pits owned by the Jones and
forms for rurnl Canadian county j morning. It was reported by Sheriff
teachers. Tim rouuty treasurer also [ L.loyd Palmer,
acts as treasurer ter all school dis-
tricts witti thc cxcepion of El Reno.
Laughiin Steel corporation. Wheel-
ing Steel corporation and Beth te-
ll. S. Magazines
Arc Confiscated
|Thc loss, according to the report hem Steel corporation,
made by Deputy Clarence Lorenzen Industry sources think there's
alter his Investigation, included six i little chance of a general return
tires, six inner tubes, a ease of anti- to work belore Monday. The na-
Local 3 has a by-law barring use | a* a five miles north
of gas for home heating by mem- ! °r Hush Springs on U. S. high-
bers. 81-
ni. Mon-
Monroney Is
Keeping Quiet
Tlie Waichekauskas couple
tend to use gas in their new home
Moss
11 reeze, a case of motor oil, a car
■ battery and $6 In change taken
from the cash register.
KHARTOUM, Sudan. Jan. 10—
(U.R)—Police confiscated the conti-
nental editions of Time and News-
week magazines today because they
contained articles concerhing Egyp-
tian King Farouk*R alleged romance
with a young Egyptian girl.
It marked thc first time any such
action was taken against news-
pa|>ers or periodicals in the Sudan,
where censorship had not existed.
The Sudan Is under the dual
administration of Egypt and Brit- I
tin.
Entrance to thc place was made
by sawing the lock from the front
door.
Wtlkerson reported that he and
Mrs. WHkerson were asleep in their
apartment on the second floor of
the building at the time of the
burglary.
He said he was awakened about
2:30 a. m. today and theorized the
burglars probably were leaving at
that time.
lion's coal miners now arc work-
ing only Mondays. Tuesday and
Wednesdays on orders of John L.
Lewis, president of the United
Mine Workers.
Many of the idle miners don't
even know why they are not work-
ing. The operators say thc walk-
out is another effort to needle
was involved in collision
because they say fumes from coal J wl1*1 H ,nlck owned by White,
in their present home makes their I opera led by Gregory, which nl-
sun. Edward, violently til.
Union officials planned to con-
sider the matter at a meeting to- J
day at Springfield.
HANOVER, N H, Jan. 10 -e/lb
Three-Day
Week Hit
Arrest Made On
Speeding Count
Albert Wayne Gustafson. 33, of
China Lake. Calif., booked at the
police station Monday on a charge
of speeding, forfeited a $5 bond
In municipal court today, accord-
ing to records of Lee Harvey, chief
of police.
Bonds Forfeited
For Overparking
Three bonds of $1 each, posted
! tor overparking, were forfeited hi
I municipal court today, records of
] lee Harvey, chief of police, re-
peated.
Bonds were forleited by Oscar
Ruckman, 117 North L avenue:
Mrs. J. H Burge. 404*4 South Hoff
avenue; and Mrs. H. M. Hensley,
815 South Ellison avenue.
WASHINGTON. Jan. 10—OPi-
The senate banking conunittee
them into signing a new contract. | ,harply dcnounced Johll L LewLs.
three-day mine week today and
asked for a study to determine
whether the anti-trust laws should
be applied to labor unions.
The committee approved. 10 to 0.
a report charging that Lewis
United Mine Workers union "took
It upon themselves to usurp the
congress' exclusive right to legislate
on production and price controls.'
The report, covering an Investiga-
tion of coal industry operations
which the committee made last
summer, also declared that the
Lewis order Imposing a tliree-doy
work week Is ’’the very antithesis
of collective bargaining.”
El Reno route 1. at 1 p.
day.
a,. _
officers said. ! ^ pla,Ui to e,,U*r ,hp U fa se*'a'
Damage to the rear of Uic Chap- j ... . ......
legedly was parked mid turned 1 pell automobile was estimated ,'y ? ? ‘fcl " * ll 1,Ph lllld
crossways of the road, blocking the $20 while damage to the front of ' ' Although no
west side of the Highway. Allen's car was approximately thc I ”“nie,,t n* '^ ‘V 0,1 'K?"
' 1 trance of Rev Wllbnni H. Alex-
_____ nnder of Oklahoma City Into the
r 1 j* li 1 j wa*. ",l
Soldiers Held I survey ol the stale has al-
. || (ways Included the possibility and
After Robbery
DURANT. Jan. 10—(U.R)-Two
Perrin Field, Tex, soldiers were
held here today after pleading In-
nocent to charges of robbing a
Moss relates that in the colli- Mune amount, Harvey reported.
sloti with the truck. ULs car was
I overturned and completely wreck-
id. He Is asking $1,084.92 as dam-
ages to thc automobile, a 1949
model.
In addition to the property
damages, the plaintiff is seeking
*5,000 for permanent disabilities.
$5,000 for his pain and suffering,
Wilkinson To Accept
Award in New York
NORMAN. Jan 10— (U.R)- Bud
Wilkinson, Oklahoma's youthrul
football coach, flies to New York
today for the National Collegiate
Athletic association convention—
and his "Coach of the Year" award.
The award—a bronze plaque-
will be made Thursday night at
the annual dinner given by the New
York World Telegram and Scripps-
Howard newspapers.
Wilkinson was being accompanied
by Frank "Pop" Ivy, end coach.
$320 for loss of wages and $160 for I Texas motorist who gave them a
medical expenses.
Negro Boy Unfrightened
By Fall into Deep Well
SHREVEPORT, La.. Jan. 10—(U.R)
—A 30-foot well filled with three
feet of water holds no terrors for
Philip Rav Kemp.
The 6-year-old Negro boy plunged
into such a situation yesterday.
When firemen pulled him out 15
minutes later, he grinned.
"I ain’t hurt and I ain’t scared,"
he told his rescuers. "And I don't
want to go to any hospital.”
He didn't.
lift.
Weather
Private Clement O Travis, 18.
and Private Leroy James. 21, were
charged with armed robbery yes-
terday before Peace Justice Leo
Thompson. He ordered them held
without ball.
The soldiers were arrested after
an 85-mlle-aji-hour chase in the
Durant area yesterday. They were
hi a car reported stolen from Will-
iam K. Hilliard. Denison. Tex.
Hilliard told office'hs he picked
up two soldier hitch-hikers at
Denison Sunday night and brought
them to Durant, where they took
his money at gunpoint and drove ! 36; at 8 a. ra., 36
of! in his car. , State of weather: Clear.
vide the best means lor division of
estates. He added that while per-
sons read of actions to break wills.
In actuality few wills are broken.
Concerning income tax. the
speaker advised business men to
make a close study of regulations
governing businesses and partner -
| ships.
Ramsey K Hardy was introduced
I as a new member.
Next Tuesday noon the El Reno
;club will be host to members or the
Yukon Lions club at a luncheon
| in lhe Wesley Methodist church.
Featured 011 the program will be
1 the showing of official University
| of Oklahoma flints on the Sugar
I bowl game. The films will be shown
! by Bill Jennings, member of the
| O. U. coaching staff. It is expected
that several members of the uni-
versity football squad also will be
present.
New Talks Scheduled
In Telephone Dispute
ST LOUIS. Jan. IO—(U.R)—P*ui-
"great Issues" courses. His son Is a | ther discussion of a wage dispute
Junior at Dartmouth 'between Southwestern Bell Tele-
phone company and 50.000 of Its
i CIO employes will be resinned to-
morrow.
probability of other candidates.
Alexander, 34-vear-old pastor of
the First Christian church, told his
congregation Sunday he will seek
the Democratic nomination. Elmer
Thomas, veteran of 23 years ln the
senate, announced earlier for re-
election.
Monroney Is lecturing at Dart-
mouth college here In the school's
Fair
Slate Forecast
and colder tonight
with
Federal Conciliator A. E. Johnson
said he would meet first with corn-
lows 25-30 ln panhandle to middle Pa«y representatives and then wtth
30s in southeast. Wednesday in-
creasing cloudiness and warmer.
El Reno Weather
For Uic 24-hour period ending
at 8 a. in. today: High. 56; low.
officers of division 20, Communica-
tion Workers, In an attempt to ar-
range a joint session on Thursday.
A truce by the workers has
averted at least until Jan. 15 a
strike voted by the union ln De-
cember.
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Harle, Budge. The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 58, No. 267, Ed. 1 Tuesday, January 10, 1950, newspaper, January 10, 1950; El Reno, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc920356/m1/3/: accessed March 28, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.