The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 52, No. 154, Ed. 1 Friday, August 27, 1943 Page: 4 of 6
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Foot
El Rena '(Okla J Dally triKflne ~
Friday, August 27,1943 "
The El Reno Daily Tribune
A Blue Ribbon Newspaper Serving a Biu* Ribbon f otjunanltj
Issued dally except Saturday from 207 South Rock Island avenue,
and entered as second-class mall matter under the act of March 3, 1379
HAT J. OYER
Editor and FabUahov
BIT DOE HARLE
News Editor
DEAN WARD
Advertising
The ASSOCIATED PRESS I* exclusively entitled to the use of re-
pubUcatlon of all the news dispatches credited to It or not credited by
this paper, and also to all the local news thereto.
All rights of publications of special dispatches herein also are reserved.
MEMBER
SOUTHERN NEWSPAPER
PUBLISHERS ASS’N.
MEMBER
OKLAHOMA PRESS
ASSOCIATION
BAII V SUBSCRIPTION RUES BY MAR IN CANADIAN ANB
BY CARRIER ADJOINING COUNTIES
One Week_________________I 20 Three Months----------DM
Three Months____________$2.25 Six Months-------------*3 OS
On* Year___________ W OO One Year-------------WOO
Including Sales Tax
FRIDAY, AUGUST 3T. ISO
YOU CANNOT EVADE YOUR RESPONSIBILITY FOR YOUR BROTH
fR TO A GREAT ETENT WE ARE OUR BROTHERS KEEPER.
THROUGH OUR EXAMPLE. Ol’B CH ARITY: Am I my brother’s keep-
«;—Gen. 4:9.
Post-War Foresight Now
I IFE in post-war America isn’t Koeng to be entirely a
k rosy, Sunday supplement miracle of soy bean plastics,
helicopter taxis, tear-drop automobiles and lunch-in-Lon-
don, dinner-in-Paris air travel. It also will face the urgent
necessity of doing somethin*? about the dwindling oil and
iron resources of “the richest nation on earth.
There is no immediate cause for alarm, unless the war
drags on beyond the most pessimistic present expectations.
But government ami industry are remembering the les-
sons learned the hard way after Pearl Harbor Ami they
are not waiting for fieace to tackle the problem of reserves
in years to come.
A senate bill is now (tending which would authorize
the government to build and operate pilot plants for the
production of synthetic crude oil from coal, until such
time as private industry could take over. Probably there
will be no pilot plants in the near future, for they take
a lot of war-necessary money and steel. Kut a senate sub-
committee has been holding hearings on the subject, and
has already inspected synthetic production in a plant or
laboratory proportions.
While this start is being made the steel and mining
industry is rushing to lease low-grade ore deposits in Min-
nesota at the same time searching for any new sources af
high-grade ore.
« • «
these two scarcity problems, that of oil seems to be
'rthe most serious. But it holds the most promising
solution. It has teen estimated that our present petroleum
supply might run out in 20 years, if n« new reserves were
discovered and we continued our present rate of consump-
tion. Our coal supply, on the same basis of computation, is
good for 3,000 years.
We have known about the oil-front-coal process since
its discovery in 1914. So has Germany. But while the
United States, secure in her natural abundance, did noth-
ing about it, Germany had a perfected commercial process
operating 12 years later About half the gasoline now used
by the Nazi war machine comes from coal, it is believed.
This country also has oil shale fields in the west esti-
mated to contain enough oil to take care of our domestic
needs for 60 years. But the extent of this deposits develop-
ment has been one mine and retorting plant which the
bureau of mines ran in Colorado for three years.
It is time we went to work in earnest on both these
scarcity problems. I’nexploited territories, particularly in
a more accessible Alaska after the war. might produce
vast new sources of oil and iron. But that is no reason for
not carrying insurance against a repetition of the costly
and almost disastrous short-sightedness in the matter of
rubber.
Two Ohio men were arrested for robbing a cripple,
Lots of lock to them!
Politeness these days consists of offering a woman your
standing room when you get off a street car.
With vacation here, home, as usual, is considered as a
last resort,
Collectors of rare coins are increasing, says a numis-
matist. Quite a few of them in the internal reveille de-
partment.
• Down Memory I^ane
Aug. 27. 1918
Mrs. A. C. Gilliert and daughter. Velma, are visiting
in Shawnee.
Mrs. Frank Adams of I^>uisiana. formerly of El Reno
and Oklahoma City, spent today with Miss Lida Dashielt.
Mrs. R. IT. Rector and daughters are visiting in Okla-
homa City with Mr. and Mrs, Nash Seller and Miss Mar-
garet Rector.
Aug. 27. 1933
Three Canadian county students at Central State ml-
lege, Edmond, are included among those who made the
summer school honor roll. They are Mrs. Mary Francis
Martin of El Reno, Miss Mary Trammel of Union City
and Miss Sarah Every of Piedmont.
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Rartell of Oklahoma City were
guests over the week-end of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Geirhart,
717 West Wade street.
Paul Spears, 601 South Hadden avenue, returned today
from a visit with friends in Davis.
i Miss Viola Reuter of Oklahoma City was a week-end
guest of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Ranter, 706 South
Hadden vaenue.
Neal Myers, 1110 South Hoff avenue, departed today
for Norman where he will attend the University of Okla-
homa the coming school term.
Mr. and Mrs. Luther Pierce, Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Flagg
spent today with friends in Enid.
Mr. and Mrs. B. M. McGinley and son, Vernon LeRoy,
of Elk City, were guests today of Mrs. McGinley’s bro-
ther, C. M. Mosher, and Mrs. Mosher. 216 North Rock
Island avenue.
Mr. and Mrs. L. A. Garner, daughter, Mary Sue,
Georgia Ksthrvn Smith and M TV I ihby (Hijoyed an out-
ing over the week-end near Cogar.
Capitol
Notebook
By John Owen
Associated Press Correspondent
/^XKLAHOMA CITY, Aug. 27—</P)
V-r —Prance Paris means a good-
natured Scotch-Irish dynamo who
Is about to close out an eventful era
In Democratic party history In Ok-
lahoma by passing along his title
of state chairman after three ac-
tion-packed terms.
The chunky S-foot-9 Missouri na-
tive. elected every other year since
1938, declined to talk about It but
reliable sources considered certain
that as a state official he would not
be a candidate again to master-
mind a political campaign.
Paris would remain as state high-
way commissioner, a job he likes
but took against his own wrlshes, and
as chairman of the highway advisory
committee to the war department,
the two duties which claim his time
now.
A new manager would find the
party machinery up to snuff, a
surplus In the treasury' and organ-
ization differences at a low ebb
Speculation had not crystallized
on a successor to the brisk, bustling
Tulsan. No Indication of a prefer-
ence had come from Governor Rob
ert 8. Kerr, who also is national
committeeman and whose approval
Is regarded as a requisite
Paris will step out with one of
his chief alms realized He had
preached cooperation between state
and federal governments, contend-
ing It would benefit Oklahoma, and
saw It become a foundation princi-
ple of the state administration.
The tireless Pari*- one of those
lucky persons who can relax com-
pletely and restore his vitality with
a quick nap- leaped into the state
political picture In 1937 at a rip-
snorting party executive committee
meeting here when he was on his
second term as first district chair-
man He was elected In 1938. the
last year of the Mar land administra-
tion. with the backing of inde-
pendents
Again in 1940 and 1942 it was
Parts, and in all three elections he
had the chairmanship won before It |
came to a vote and thus avoided the
discard of a floor fight
He has swung through one cam-
paign after another with the same
enthusiasm that he displays in go-
ing alter a string of fish.
He wears glasses, runs his fingers
through his hair and does not smoke (
but consumes copious wads of
stringy black tobacco He moves
about ceaselessly. It’s energy not
nerves He Is SO years old and
looks not a day over 40. AU his
wrinkles are the smile kind. He’s
on the hefty side
• * •
r* XPERT!NO a dominant party
L through a hard campaign and
keeping the factions off each oth-
er’s throats is a real test for a chair- I
man Paris reduced harmony to a
science He once likened operating
a stale convention to building a
hoic
That was In the 1940 session when
he erected his convention program
on a foundation made up of rep-
resent lives chosen from various
groups within the party when there
was danger things might get rough
He displayed lo the world a united
party front.
The party Is liable to miss that
Parts touch as organizer In staging
big statewide whlngdlngo. Tire con-
tusion of last June's victory dUiner
and subsequent grumbling by the
(aMhful was a sample Paris was
busy at the time with highway af-
fairs.
Tn Paris politics is a duty as well
as a game he likes and he has a
singular philosophy about It.
’’If we don’t have political par-
ties. we have dictatorship '’ he once
said.
“I believe a citizen should Join
the party of his choice and then do
something about it.
"The critic who just sits back and
belly-aches shouldn't have anything
to say about it.
“I don’t believe in partisan poli-
tics in schools, charities and civic
affairs, but I believe in having a
political party responsible for gov-
ernment so U can be continued tn
power or taken out at the will of the
people on election Issues.’’
see
OARI8 was Oeark-bom in Law-
I rence county in Missouri be-
tween Joplin (and Springfield in
1893, and went from Morrtsvllle tn
Polk county to Tulsa In 1913 He
served seven years on the Tulsa |
state fair board but never has nin |
for public office.
The family Includes the pleasant
Mrs Paris. Richard, at 20 In
army officers training at Port Leo-
nard Wood: Frances Ann. 18. a
student at Cottey college. Nevada
Mo; and 16-veer-old Jack, a sen-
ior in Tulsa htghschooi. Paris Is In
the business of lubricating and fuel
oil Jobber
Let’s check up on that intriguing
name Oeography had nothing to
do with It. France was the last
name of a first cousin of his fa-
ther
A chairmans career la studded
with controversy. Paris waged his
bitterest battle with Former Gover-
nor Leon O. Phillips that began In
late 1941 and became a classic of
Oklahoma politics.
Getting a Palm-Line on the Old Boy
Buhinil the Scenes
In Washington
BY PETER FDRON
NEA tldf CerrespoMdeat
QUEBEC —The Joint American-Canadian occupation of Ki-ka comes
s as a mark of punctuation- an evclamntion point in accent the
importance of the Quebec Conferwn. e
Th# word before the exrlumation mark Is “POWER ’’ And the
Quebec Conference may well be described as a
power conference It is a logical development to
the acquisition of military supremacy by the United
Stales and Great Hi itain. Before superior power,
(9 U the J .ps simply evacuated Kiska. Before nipe-
V 1 rior power, the Germans gave way in North Africa,
^a M and before supwvioi power the Germans and Italians
M moved out of Sieily
H ■ With this superiority achieved, the calling of the
B H Quebec Conference was inevitable It is unques-
M fioo.iblv Hie grealr t assemblage of militar y brains
■I ,w| m history It comes as the culmination of the
'roO JjK? v,iai m which the United Stales as the arsenal of
■Br demoerary 'has been building up this power—the
might to deliver the final crushing blows.
| i may be many weeks before the rtn.il decisions of the Quebec Con-
ference of generals and admirals may be known to the public.
Bottle plans mapped at Quebec will be translated first into action in
the field and on the sp#s. to be read about in big headlines as each
of the new campaigns is launched.
11 has been a foregone conclusion that all the accomplishments of
the Quebec Conference could not be revealed when it ended. All the
speculation on what was being planned has been just that—specula-
tion and if any bf the speculation bits the mark aM is proved cor-
rect by later development-, it will be pure luck and Nothing more.
Tho speculation truiy have served a useful purpose in confusing the
enemy on what really was being cooked up If it has been a cause
of confusion at home, that will probably have to be added to the list
of inconveniences of war.
This confusion at home might possibly have been avoided if the
Quebec Conference had been handled as previous conferences have
been handled Casablanca was all over before the general public
knew it even had begun. The same thing is true of the meeting of
Churchill and Roosevelt a year ago, when they announced the Atlantic
Charter. Washington conferences of military leaders have been an-
nounced as has mg begun and having ended, and that is all.
• • •
|F planning of the Quebec Conference had been left to the Ameri-
can-. it i- possible that arrangements here would have been similarly
handled The arrangements at Quebec, however, were made by the
C anadians and the British, and for reasons best known to themselves
they chose to do it with a good bit of ballyhoo and advance publicity
requiring constant, repeated whooping-up to maintain interest for the
final announcement of what could be told ut the end of the meeting
This is perhaps the only aspect of the Quebec Conference which ia
open to criticism.
—— ■ -——
Detroit (ourt Work-or-Fight
Spurns Ceilings Law Enforced
DETROIT. Aug. 27 —OIF— Re-
ceivers for the Lelsner Manufactur-
ing company Thursday were In-
structed by Circuit Judge Guy A.
Miller to Ignore office of price ad-
ministration ceilings In disposing
of the company's tool and die ma-
chinery and "to accept bids at any
figure that may be secured."
So far as this court Is concerned,
that order has no effect and the re-
ceiver in this matter will be di-
rected. when the sale eventually
takes place, to make a report to
this court and to accept bids at any
figure that may be secured, regard-
less of whether they are above or be-
low any alleged ceiling prices fixed
by the OPA,” The Judge told Arnold
Zeleznik, attorney for the receiver
"There is no statue, no act of
congrees. known to this court which
gives to the OPA any jurisdiction
over the sale of property which ia
propgrly in the handn of the officers
of this court."
I ROCKVILLE Md.. Aug 27—</P)
—Two men accused of violating
Maryland's "work or fight’’ law
were sentenced Thursday to 3()
days In Jail, to work on roads, or
pay fines of $50 each
Judge Donald A. De Lashmutt In
magistrate’s court told them. "We
are sending men away from this
county to fight. Those who stay
at home must work."
He said the men. R A. Orlmes,
Dametstown, and Stanley Day,
LAjrtonsvUle, were farm laborers,
Recent employers made complaints
against them. Judge Lashmutt
stated.
HRs. Roy Anderson of Duncan
arrived Thursday evening for a
brief visit with her parents, w
aw4 M>( »«cNln Patrick MET Smith
Hull avenue
Lesson in English
WORD8 OFTEN MISUSED Do
not say. “You have seen him often-
er than I have " Say. more often "
OFTEN MI8PRO NOUNCEO:
Credence. Pronounce kre-dens. first
e as in me, second e unstressed, ac-
cent first syllable.
OFTEN MISSPELLED: Personal;
one n and at. Personnel; two n’s
and el.
SYNONYMS: Equivocal, uncer-
tain. ambiguous, problematic.
WORD STUDY: 'Use a word
three times and It Is yours.” Let
us Increase our vocabulary by mas-
tering one word each day Today’s
word' CIRCUMSTANCED (adjec-
tive!; placed In a particular condi-
tion. “A government so circum-
stanced wan powerless to da good."
Unugh mi
Yankee Clipper
Now Sergeant
SANTA ANA, Calif, Aug 27—(/PI
—The Yankee Clipper Is now a
full-fledged sergeant.
Yes. sir. Joltin’ Joe Dl Maggtn
has been promoted to the rank of
sergeant In the army air forces.
And he didn’t get It for belting
homerum for the fliers' baseball
team, which has been making a
good name for Itself this summer
In the Independent ranks He got
II the hard way He's stationed
In the physical fitness program at
the camp
i cont.se.om an jeo joHn/on
pHICKASHA, Aug. 27—(Special»—
When will the war be over?
Will the mainland of Italy be In-
vaded soon? When will Italy capi-
tulate? Where and when will our
American forces strike at Germany?
How long can Germany take the
; aerial bombardment she has been
receiving for the past several
months? What do you hear of the
internal troubles in Germany?
When will German sue for peace
and why does Joe Stalin refuse to
meet with Roqsevelt and Churchill,
and will Russia stand hitched after
Germany Is out of the war?
These and many other questions
are being asked me over and over
as I go from one town and com-
1 munity to another during this, the
longest breathing spell we have
had in the district since Hitler in-
vaded Poland in September 1939
Certainly no one. not even the
president of the United States, nor
1 his military or naval chiefs, nor lias
any other of the so-called experts,
| the answer to these Important ques-
I (ions that are in the hearts and
i minds of our citizens.
But such questions strongly in-
dicate that the winning of the war
and bringing the boys back as soon
as possible ia the one consuming
thought of the fathers and mothers
and other loved ones of the mil-
lions of gallant men as well as the
increasing number of patriotic young
; women now in uniform Other
problems, important as they be. siak
; into insigaifkrance as compared with
; the winning of the war.
• * •
/"vF COURSE all true Americana
hope and fervently pray that
the war will be over much sooner
than the most opt mis Uc now dare
to predict Certainly the situation
on the many far-flung fronts of the
world has materially improved dur-
ing every month, week and almost
each day of 1943.
But let us not indulge too much
in wishful thinking Although Italy
1 is about “washed out,” certainly
' there Is no basis for the hope of
a complete collapse of both Ger-
many and Japan In 1943 as a few
I of our over-optimistic citizens now
predict.
On the other hand, for a high of-
I flctal of the navy department to
give the doleful message that we are
j preparing for the war to last until
1949 is absurd and hurtful ■ rather
j than helpful to the war effort.
• e a
NYWAY. if conditions on the
home front werq half as en-
couraging as on the many foreign
fronts, and especially U the Wash-
ington bureaucrats were as anxious
to win the war as are the men tn
the armed forces and the parents
and loved ones who are barking
those brave men with everything
they have, It would hasten the end
of the present struggle and usher In
that happy day when the dove of
peace shall once again hover over
this sin-sick and war-weary world.
Hollywood
Film SKop
By Ernest Foster
United Press Correspondent
IIOLLYWOOD, Aug. 27 — (U.R>—
* * Back in Hollywood to make
her first picture in 10 years. Tallu-
lah Bankhead — blond, exotic,
throaty-voiced Tallulah—has met a
cool reception.
Because of her long absence an
Impression has sprung up that she
doesn’t like the movie capital. Tal-
lulah labels it a mislmpression.
‘Tve always liked Hollywood." she
says. "I like to be where my friends
are. and most of them are in Hol-
lywood."
The new picture is Alfred Hitch-
cock's production of the John Stein-
beck story. "Lifeboat," for 20th
Century-Fox.
"I'm a southern girl, and I like
the climate, the living conditions
and the working conditions. I al-
ways have.” insists Tallulah.
"It just happens that I always
have been and always will be pri-
marily a stage actress Any screen
acting I might do would be in the
nature of a sideline between stage
plays. It’s a very welcome side-
line. too.
“The trouble is the screen offers
have never come at the right time
until now. I've had to turn down
at least a dozen because they Inter-
fered with stage commitments.
" 'Craig's Wife’ for one. I was
paged for that the day that I
started rehearsals for the play. Re-
I fleeted Glory.’ Another was the
role of ’Mrs Skeffington.' I was in
j the middle of a Broadway run at the
time.
“It seems difficult for movie pro-
' ducers to understand my reluctance
to run out on stage commitments.
But I don't see why. They wouldn't
want any of their players running
out of screen commitments."
She smiles persuasively. "With
Lifeboat' a tempting movie role
came along in the summertime. As
you can see I lost no time grab-
bing It.
“I’m going to enjoy working in
Hollywood for the next 10 or 12
weeks before I go Into another play.
“My idea of a perfect arrange-
ment would be a play In New York
In the winter and a picture in Hol-
lywood in the summer "
Trusting Texan Learns
About City Slickers
BOSTON. Aug. 27—(/P)—Corporal
j Philip MeCusker of Denison, Tex.,
j was short of cash Thursday, but
much wiser in his knowledge of the
J pitfalls of a big city.
MeCusker told police he returned
to the United States recently after
14 months In Greenland, with a
bankroll of $3,600. At the sugges-
tion of a waitress In a cafe, he
told police, he turned the roll over
to three cafe employes for safe-
keeping.
A few days later he became un-
easy he said, and confided his
suspicions to the worldly wise po-
| lice of the cafe district. They
i found the roll. $1,100 short.
Seabee Rejects Offer
Of $8 Wife in Africa
INDIANAPOLIS, Aug 27—(U.R1—
j Chief Carpenter Mate Robert G.
Noyes, a navy seabee who returned
i from active duty In Africa, said
the United States dollar has a
i high value there, but added that
he did not take advantage of some
of the bargains that were offered.
“A tribe leader wanted to sell
me a daughter for eight dollars,*’
j Noyes said. "When I refused, he
offered me his son's wife, and fl-
his own wife."
T wasn’t In the market," he
said
] ually
Public Records
Problem a Day
A kettle is in the shape of a
hemisphere with an Inside diameter
of 2 ft. How many gallons will the
j kettle hold?
ANSWER
15 5/7 gallons. Explanation—Mul-
tiply the cube of *4 of 2 by 22/7
tptt by 2/3 by 74 'number of
gallons in 1 cubic foot.)
Farmer Is Killed In
Hay Haler Mishap
PORTERVILLE, Calif, Aug 27—
i/P)—James T. Davenport. 25, lost
his footing while feeding a hay
baler Thursday and fell Into the
machine. He was compressed and
bound in a bale of hay.
His widow and two children sur-
vive.
Warranty Deeds
Patrick J. Devitt to Joe B and
Maudie M. Thomason. Part of lots
15 and 17. all of lot 16. block 58, El
Reno.
John J. and Gattie M Cantley to
Margaret R. and F W. Dohoney
Lots 18. 19 and 20. block 10. Keith’s
addition to El Reno.
H. R. and Rose Holtz to Harry
Roberson. Lot 20. block 111, El
Reno.
J. S. Cope to Anna L. Hurst Lots
7. 8 and 9. block 12, Todd's second
addition to Calumet.
Quitclaim Deed
J. C. Ezell to E. C. Wilson. Lots
13. 14. 15 and 16. block 22. Lake
View addition to El Reno.
Assignment of Oil and Gas lease
A. Gutowsky to Sunray OH com-
pany S NE 21-14-5
Derrre of Distribution
Canadian county court to Ethel
Lair. N NF. 27-11 7: to Esther SchU-
macher. S NE 27-11-7; to Roy E
Sanders. W NE 28-11-7; to John
Sanders. N NW 28-11-7. lots 1 and
2 In the NE 29-11-7; to William
Sanders. SE 36-11-7; lo Roy San-
ders, l-9th. Ethel Lair. l-9th.
Blanche Ritter. l-9th. John Sanders,
2-9ths, William Sanders, l-9th,
Florence Weaver. l-9th. Mary Mel-
ton. l-9th and Esther Schumacher.
I- 9th. lots 3 and 4. block 47. West
addition to Sherman, and lots 21.
21. 22. 23 and 24. block 5. Sherman
Deed of Conveyance and
Reconversion
Heirs of Morris. G. Sanders, de-
ceased. to Ethel Lair. N NE 27-11-
7; to Esther Schumacher, S NF. 27-
II- 7; to Roy F Sanders. W NE 28-
11-7; to John Sanders, N NW 28-
11-7 and lots 1 and 2 In the NF.
28-11-7; to William 8anders SE
38-11-7
BASEBALL TEAM MANAGER
I A"
HORIZONTAL
1 Pictured ball
club manager.
13 That one
14 Chiane
15 Cut
16 Him
17 Lair
19 Digit
20 Make a
mistake
21 Sand mound
22 Prince
24 Narrow fillets
26 Sound
27 Corn spike
28 Young flower
29 Sow
31 Mortal
35 Tackle
38 Either
39 He is —— of
the St. Louis
• Cardinals
40 U«
41 Spea r
44 Helmet
45 Act
47 Dine
49 Czar
Answer
Previous Puzzle
5t A RL,
iPJ GOTl
IEA
jiR A
OAT
SI Barter
S3 Airplane
garage
56 Hearing organ
57 Symbol for
erbium
58 Mineral rock
59 Near
60 Manuarript
labbr )
61 Steal
83 Id est labbr.)
64 Confusion
65 Twist of rope
VERTICAL
1 Reside
2 Separate*
article
3 Pound (abbr )
4 SIHI
5 Thin hole
6 Oliv e genus
7 Oak
8 Belongs to her
9 Many of his
players have
gone to ——
10 Opei ;i (ibbi .i
11 Conjunction
12 At this place
18 Pleasant
21 Portend
23 Fishing stick
25 Flower part
26 Pull
29 Dirt
30 Period of tim«
31 Drudge
32 Literary
collection
33 Grow old
34 Tanned skin*
36 Fear
37 Crimson
42 Background
43 Child
45 Nickname for
Daniel
46 Therefore
48 Rigid
50 Wooden shoe
51 He manages t
ba.'Cboll —
32 Ratio
54 Ireland
55 Cool.-e gust
80 Myself
62 British
(abbr i
Look and Learn
Lendahle Reserves
In Ranks Decrease
WASHINGTON. Aug 27-(/PI —
Lendahle reserves or federal re-
serve member banka decreased
$180,000,000 the past week, the fed-
eral reaerve board reported Thurs-
day. and stood at $1,110,000,000 on
Wednesday
The banks during the week In-
creased their holding of govern-
ment ••e'lriMe* $831 non an nf
which $000,000 070 was In bills
1. What precipitated the crisis
which caused our war with Mexico?
2. What Is considered the moat
valuable animal in the modem
zoo?
3. In history, who was known as
the ’Maid of Orleans?”
4. How many players are there
on n cricket'team?
5. In what country Is the vokano
Popocatepetl A
ANSWERS
I. The annexation of Texas.
3. The Indian rhinoceros.
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Dyer, Ray J. The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 52, No. 154, Ed. 1 Friday, August 27, 1943, newspaper, August 27, 1943; El Reno, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc920409/m1/4/: accessed March 30, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.