The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 47, No. 91, Ed. 1 Tuesday, June 21, 1938 Page: 1 of 6
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: El Reno Daily Tribune and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
Of Death
Train Wreck
May Reach 40
ttnued From Page One)
Irg locomotive pitched Into |
ek Seven of the 13 car*
It piled up In a heap of
ukee officials said the train
at least 155 passengers and
of 10.
17 known dead. 44 In hoe- ■
7 treated for minor Injuries. ■
other reported ur harmed. ”
workers were hopeful the
pad would not exceed 40 |
telle, assistant general pas-
agent for the Milwaukee 1
at St. Paul, vvas at the ;
ad estimated the dead would
36.
lospital Notes
Claxton. 600 South Miles
underwent a major op- J
this morning at the Catto]
I
jMcCailon. Yukon route 3.1
Tinted to the Catto hospital f
or medical treatment.
Cecil Smith. Okarche route
erwent a major operation
irnlng at the Catto hospital.
Ralph Cook. Oklahoma City,
the Catto hospital this
i to receive medical treat-]
>n Jones. 623 South Ellison j
underwent a major opera-
nday at the El Reno sant-
Baker. Crescent. Is recetv-
itment at the El Rero sanl-
whlch he entered Sunday.
i A Morris. 211 North Bar-
enue. underwent a major
on Sunday afternoon at
to sanitarium
Ray Henthorn. Mustang,
lmitted' for medical treat-
it the El Reno sanitarium
1 Pratt, 13-yearold son of
d Mrs Prank Pratt. Yukon,
« treated at the El Rena
um for a broken leg He
I the hospital Surday
William Floyd. ISIS 8outh|
w avenue, was dismissed Bat-
rom the El Reno sanitarium |
derwent a major operation
earlier
TENCE GIVEN
IN LIQUOR CASI
I Roberts. 43. of El Reno]
was ordered to serve 30 day
Canadian county Jail and
a /fine of 650 and court cost]
irges of liquor possession
rts pleaded guilty at htj
ment before Judge Dnmrt
».son In county court Jun
. sentence was deferred until
defendant allegedly had 3fl
>f whiskey S. Ms possession
14.
J1
,(ttiU'i'*
UtlM «"***''
The El Reno Daily Tribune
You Can Buy It For
Leaa In El Rena
Single Copy, Three Cents
UP) MEANS ASSOCIATED PRESS .
A Blue Ribbon Daily Newspaper Serving Oklahoma’s Blue Ribbon Area
EL RENO, OKLAHOMA, TUESDAY, JUNE 21, 1938
tun MEANS UNITED PRESS
VOLUME 47, NO. 91
^LEPHANTS CAPTURED ON ORDER OF SIAMESE ARMY AUTHORITIES
X
EL RENO VOTED
OF SIK RACES
Candidates Have 21 Days
Left Before Primary
Election July 12
\
> l
#
Application For Federal
License To Be Made
Immediately
■
m
%
V
Wl
Headin’ for the first roundup, more than 300
wild elephants were captured at Lobburi, Siam, and
driven into this enclosure. After the roundup, which
OKLAHOMA CITY. June 21—
<U.R>—Oklahoma's political candid-
ates had 21 days left today before
the primary election July 12.
Interest continued high in the
U. 8. senate race.
Ooyernor E. W. Marland left
for Eufaula after a statewide radio
address in which he attacked his
opponents. Senator Hmer Thomas
and Representative Oomer Smith.
Principal theme of Marlands 30-
mlnute talk was his "support of
Mr. Roosevelt." With the president
scheduled to appear In Oklahoma !
before the primary. Marland read
all the correspondence he had had
with the White House since Feb
ruary
Tells Of Invitation
He said he didnt believe the
president would express a prefer-
ence In tlie senate race, and that j
he had urged him to let Oklahoma
vote their own convictions.
"I asked Mr Rooaevelt to Invite
all Democratic senatorial and con- I
grcsslonal candidates to be his
guests as soon as he entered the
state," Marland said
The governor criticized the farm
bill and the federal social security
act He also rapped newspaper
polls.
Surprise Is Given
Marlands criticism of the two]
new deal acts came somewhat as | — — '
a surprise because of hts "100 per- BERLIN june 21 -(VJO- Thr Hwlry ***** H^lron mentor
cent" Roosevelt stand He said f tghett Nuj p^y quirters. tt was »t Garber the past three years
farmers should be alowed to raise rpvealed authoritatively today, have has been elected to serve as head !
more food 'In these time* i gjven orders that violence In the football coach and assistant bas-1
stress " He assert*! *«.*?** campaign against Jews must cease ,;rtball ln E hlgh. |
rral social MCUrtty “Vlkl"1 0 The police checkup of passports dllrms th, 1938.39 lfrn,
Justice to the oid peopleh He to- and g^ral Jewuh sctivltles as lt was aiuounced today from the
dorsed the general welfare ai well as the steady aryanUatton ol offlpe of Paul R Tkyior, SUpertn-
whlch congress failed to approve. oerman business under the econom- tendent of schools
Thomas and Smith were In south- ^ mlntMry wiu continue, it was . screeds Re* Kellv who
army authorities had ordered, 50 of the elephants
were kept while the remainder of the large herd was
'turned loose again.
JEWS 10 FACE HenrV Averu /s Chosen 1
i El Reno Football Coach
LESS VIOLENCE -
- Former Phillips Athlete
Orders Are Submitted By Is Designated To
Nazi Quarters Succeed Kelly
AVF.RY'K COACHING
RECORD
Year
Place
Won
Tied
Lest
1926
Carrier
6
1
1
1927
Carrier
4
0
5
1M
Medford
6
1
2
1930
Medford
7
2
0
1931
Medford
3
0
7
1932
Medlord
6
0
2
1933
Medford
6
0
3
1934
Medford
6
1
3
1935
Garber
1
1
9
1936
Oar ber
9
1
1
1937
C, it r 1m 1
9
1
1
Totals
63
1
24
10 LOCAL STAFF
Installation of a short-wave police
radio for the El Reno police de-
partment will begin Immediately,
George M. March, city manager,
disclosed today after final approv-
; nl by the board of commissioners
at a special meeting Mar day night
It will be several weeks at least,
j however, before the radio can be
I put Into use by the police force. |
he pointed out.
While lt will take only a few
; days to Install the system, a license i
Irom the federal communications
commission must be obtained be-
fore operation can begin
Tho set whose purchase was de-
cided upor by the commissioners
Is an RCA 40-watt transmitter
which will operate on a frequency
of 2450 kilocycles.
Cost Is Revealed
The transmitter. Installed com-
I plete in the police station with
antenna on top of the city hall,
will cost S500. while two receivers
will cost ,*65 and *125. Mr March
'said.
The *65 receiver will be put ln
the police patrol car. while the
| more experstve receiver wrtll be ln-
Did You Hear
—©——
CHARLES F. BOWERS has
found a way to cope with
these summer showers which
lately have been coming up
without much warning.
When the weather Is warm.
Mr. and Mrs. Bowers spend
much of their time on a porch
of their home at 415 South Hoff
avenue. There they have their
magazine stands, reading lamps,
and other outdoor "living room"
furniture, as well as a radio.
Most of the furnishings can-
not be damaged by rain, but
when a storm blows up. some-
thing has to be done about the
radio. In order to save time
and trouble. Mr. Bowers has
found lt satisfactory to grab his
wife's cellophane raincoat and
wrap lt around the radio.
With today the longest one
ln the entire year—with sum-
mer starting officially — whea*
fa. mere had an opportunity to
harvest at least a tiny bit more
wheat than they did yesterday,
or than they will do tomorrow,
some of the barber shop sages
observed.
"Yeah, and some people I
know will have Just a little less
time to fish each day from now
on,” Elmer 8chwab opined.
Mud-Covered Tourist Car
Lifted From Slime Of
Montana Creek
stalled ln the police station to pick
Harvey <«l. Gladys - “ “I™"* M*d' T° '
, , The transmitter and receiver ln
I hi Mips KleCted the police station will be Installed
- In Ahe office of Tom 8hackleU,
Two additional Instructors tolc"‘ef ““"“"g *» the cli* m*n‘
Antlers and Smith at Clayton f)rd,rjy and legal channels.
Marlands principal talk today will a,.^.informed
be at Muskogee
sd Nazi quarters said rJ^gn^ his duties here" early ^in i PhUI,‘? u™ver*ll> fellowship at the University of Wls-
of Jewish shops and ,he ^ to enrol lt Baylor uni- cons*n
serve with El Reno school faculties
during the 1938-39 term were an-
nounced today bj Paul R Taylor,
rupertn tender t.
Harvey Cromwell has been elect-
ed as debate coach an<f teacher of
speech ln the highschool. He will
succeed Jack Douglas of Norman
who resigned his place here after
one year to accept a teaching
i the painting
smashing ot windows was indepest- toc^pTetr jjjj UmSumII ^im^oa^ahfc
dert action by certain party ele- work or hl8 mMt,r s 1** lewd ln ,00tb*11 fo,lr ***** whl>*
tn football four years whife **r &sT^<r>ntre!
• —---- ---- r' - • wvia vi iii0 iiiwiici a urfirr mu | _ j . . Phlllirfetk trtl dfcRTW irOlfl ElSt OWltnl
merits and not inspired by police autumn Kellv will assume a place j . ... .. Tt : .. State Teachers college at Ada
The violenoe get out of hand tt nn |h, teaching sUff at a state , n has coached football teams wher# h(i maJoml ^ 5pw.h arc
s-rsi-* ”
Mild Reprimand* Due Sndcraon Green basketball coach I v .t-.. . at Ute University of Iowa and
_
inn ill, ...... innitarinir 'ber* would go beyond now u studying at the Urlversity oanyho table term'
100 Attorney Appearing # mlld reprimand "bicause of Uic California tn Los Angelea and Averv who is 6 feet 2 Inches hall Aft*r In Henryetta htgh-
dtfllcully ol establishing who com- a,n continue as head basketball weighs 208 pounds He Is married srh0°1 *fvpnl1 years. Mr Cromwell
mltted the acta.” roach In El Reno next year. Iind a daughter 7 year of WM connected with the Metropol-
Avery has a master s degree tn age
In Federal Court
Nazi quarters admitted that the
OKMULGEE June 31—(6*)—'The violence made difficult Uie pro-
closing chapter of the federal court gram of "orderly aryaniaalton' of
battle of Jnora than 1.000 claim- ,Oerman business. It was estimated
ants for the Jackson Barnett for- I u,at 40 to 50 Jewish sheps. reat-
tune was Interrupted briefly today gurants and cafea In Berlin had
bv Arna Laura Barnett, the ec- f loseu undei the pressure of anti-
centric )ndlan't widow, when she violence,
valnlv sought an Injunction to halt q1( mlxrd with rome smelly sub-
the sale of her 18-room Los An- wmx smeared around J»e
ager.
Application for a federal license
to operate the short-wave set will
be made with the communications
commission Immediately, and If
permission Is obtained the set prob-
ably will be put Into use before
the end of the summer.
Others Purchases Authorised
The city commissioners have
been considering purchase of a
police radio system for six months,
studying various types and makes
of the short-wave set*
Foreign Troops
MILES CITY, Mont . June 21—
(U.P) — The mud-covered tourist
.sleeping car of a wrecked passenger
train was lifted from the slime of
Custer creek early today and two
bodies were removed from lt.
Workers previously had recovered
35 bodies of men, women and chil-
dren killed Sunday when the crack
passenger train, the Olympian,
crashed through a trestle. The final
toll may reach 55.
When the 100-ton railroad der-
rick finally succeeded tn lifting one
end of the heavy car from the wa-
ter. workers climbed Inside. They
brought out two bodies and then
jwork was suspended until the der-
rick could be reinforced. Engi-
neers feared the strain might cause
lt to topple.
Those who entered the sleeper
could not estimate the number of
bodies lt contained, but railroad of-
ficials believed there were approxi-
mately 20. The car was filled with
silt and mud Part of It still was
submerged as the derrick was not
powerful enough to swing it onto
the bank.
Other Bodies Missing
Removal of Its bodies will provide
a fairly accurate check of the
dead. Sonic bodies, however, may
have been washed downstream or
burled ln the mud The body of
lone woman passenger was at Olen-
LONDON. Jure 21 —(^1— Dele- dive. 50 miles down the Yellowstone
gates of Europes major nations rtm where lt was washed by the
today agreed to send evacuation -flash flood" which swept down the
commissions to Spain ln an effort dry bed of Custer creek and weak-
to rwnove foreign troops from the ened the trestle Just before the
23-months-old clvU war. and Brl- olympian roared onto It.
The outstanding hero of the dis-
aster. Lewis Williams, negro sleep-
ing car porter was pressing com-
pany officials for a new assign-
taln strove to make this a means
of obtaintrg a truce.
Prime Minister Neville Chamber-
lain. defending his government's
failure to halt Spanish Insurgen. ^ent '^ed'"wtth" liaVtng" sat^l
bombing of Bru sh vessel, tndteated ,t ,CMl „ „ w* ful,
to the house of commons that an . ... . . 1
armistice was the only practical "STT m ^ , '"T
way to end “all these difficulties. f peJh“‘f
, "All we can say." he went on “ lhf
At their special meeting Mar da) *1* that we rtiall from time to time “ P,un«*d J"-
night the commissioners also auth- try to take some means with a view [ , . 1T J* “v?* h,m*Hf
orised purchase of a new dump to seeing whether there are any W try1"f *® *** 001 hto P«*n-
truck for the street department, favorable prospects of success and who ***“ 11 retired for the
purchase of a pump for a n**w city , that when the time comes we shall n'Dt"
.well dug recently, and purchase of be only too glad to offer our
30(i feet of 2 1-3-Inch fire hose
foi the fire department.
The proposed lighting of a soft-
ball field was discussed, but no
action was taken.
IN CAR ACCIDENT1 OFFICIALLY TODAI
grles mansion
entrances and terraces of three;
Itar Life Insurance company at
Oklahoma City four years before
rc-entering the teaching field The
past semester he was speech In-
structor In Durant highschool
Mr Cromwell, who Is SO yean
cf age. la married and has ate1
child. _
Elementary Teacher Named
miss oiadys Phillips of watoncs Constitutionality Uphold
{has been elected to serve In the
El
$5,550 Judgment
State Imminent
JTi Aitkin* Warmer Temperatures In J*£ gjj
of the four elementary’ school*
when assignments are Issued by the
superintendent In August
Miss Phillips holds the bachelor
of'art* degree from Oklahoma Col-
lege for Women at Chic kasha
where she was graduated In 1933
LAW HELD LEGAL
By Supreme Court
services, either alone or tn con-11
Junction with others. In bringing 1
this lamentable conflict to an ;
end."
Agreements on the evacuation
j commissions, feature of a revised
1 British plan for withdrawing alien
soldiers from Spain, was reached ______
1 ln a morning sitting of the chair- ,
man's sub-committee of the 23- * olicy To Humanize War*
I a lion non-intervention committee f _
Even Soviet Russia which l,e'el0P(fl
hitherto has provided frequent o*>- ■
' stacles to the powers search for a WASHINGTON. June 21 —oPi—
Spanish peace, bowed to the will Secretory of State Cordell Hull
of the other powers has been developing a program
The aub-committee was to meet to humanise warfare with the par-
agaln late today Meanwhile, mem- titular objectives of stopptrg ,trial
aid apparently the woman, whose lng
marriage to Barnett was annulled simultaneously with the orders _
hy a federal court after hi* deaUi a(almt vlobeire. Jie Nazi* relaxed
lost her slim chance of recovering lt,rn aliening Oerman Jews In * MiU fllw1 ln Canadian coun- High temperatures—expected to
even a small part of the vast OH abrosd ,y strict court late Monday by reach new 1938 peaks Ir some
fortune. I * If* Pack, who lives near Calumet, sectors—ushered summer Into Ok-
The stole 01 California plan* to , *3 • , • f\ • » Jtwigment for dtmsge* totaling lahoma today
ell the mansion to meet the de- IvCSI^Ililt IOI1 IlINCII *5 550 Is sought against Dr. W C The solstice, the moment at which
mands nl Mrs Barnett's creditors I> . C I 4 , "* ine sun reacne* 11* northernmost
Rebuttal teslimory waa scheduled 1 iV Agl’lll The plalntitt. who claims he suf- extremity and start* receding
Kunkel of Kingfisher.
the sun reaches It* northernmost
to continue after today's noon re-
fered serious and permanent Injuries southward, will occur at 8:40 p m.
cess with argument* later In the 1 NRW roRK Junf j, in an automobile mishap Sunday Today was the longest day of the
day. 0 Turreou the specfkl agent of the ">Bht ***** IV000 as damages for vear. bringing Oklahoma approx!-
It I* expeded the pleas of the frdrral bl)rrau of investigation who liersonal injuries, *200 for medical matelv 14 hours and 51 minutes ol
approximately ino attorneys In- ,,radw1 lhr rrrrnt mvesUgsiwo tn- «re and *350 for damages to a surshlne
volved will occupy the remainder ^ itrtIvtUee In Uie Uni- I ruck "Weean expect a considerable In-
of the week reslgred today P*ck relates In hut court petition crease In average temperatures
--T~_ Turreous detective WOft reeult- that at about 9 p m Sunday h* during the next few weeks. Harry
ItfHmOII 111 •<* yesterday In indictment of lt was tiding in a truck driven east Wahlgren. U B weather observer
_ persons by the federal grand Jury by Willard Pack, a brother, on U »1 Oklahoma City, told the United
Minnesota Count
OKLAHOMA CITY. June 31 —OP ]
Constiiutlonallty of
today.
Persons close to the slate depart-
ment disclosed today that Hull Is
bers worked on text* of notes to be bombings of civilians
sent the Spanish government and
the Insurgent regime seeking ap-
, ... .. ?*** l.T“‘,prov#1 tor ** fv*fu,Uon c0*n" J devoting much of his time "to" this
TT*. *Ulh0r' ' ml“‘0n> pUn subject, brought to hU attention
Ised by the 18th legislature was Britain Exert* Pressure . ^ nn Rlu.ni«h
upheld by the state supreme court The British government exerted r... 1
pressure on France and Italy, re-
verslty of Oklshoma. Northwestern
State Teachers college at Alva,
the Urlversity of Colorado and
the University of Wyoming during
summer term*
-----— — ----------- The decisions held the rote* did , spectlvely friendly to the govern . .
She also ha* attended the Uni- not constitute a debt In excess ment and Insurgents to get a truce 1' “ ^J*Ur* *ntfrrO into
-**” cu-is*—»- of th, $t00i0Oo constitutional llm- In Spain to •permit the commission 0|P,n»n»Mr d»cu**ion*
Details are not yet ready, ror
with other
nation*
Ruwta's Stole department official*, how-
Itatlon to operate
The ruling came on a tost B B Kagan. Soviet
payer *' agirinst. H.S'Ttol'en* stoto theV were^^l^U" |URKesttow sdvancecT^rd.v In
Miss Piitlltp* has had 15 years' treasurer C C Childers, stole of reaching am accord london bv Norman H Davis chalr-
r .perlenoe a* an elemenlarv school auditor, and Oovemor E W Mar- Informed sources said the British m,r "f American Red Cross
Instructor. She was at Watonga lard government now was satisfied that HugtrsUnn* offered
four year*, at Quapaw seven years. The three officials are members France had effectively closed her Dsvt* proposed neutralised hna-
an <! Eagle City two years, and at of a board mated to supervise frontier to the shipment of arms p|tai annes an International con-
Hltchcock the past two years. issuance of the notes <« government Spain This was ventlon prohibiting or restricting
Taylor Goes To Chicago I The board propose* Issuing *6- considered another coitributton to bombing of "oper" town* and
With the election of Mr Crom-I «*>•«» worth of note, bearing 2 »ucc*. wd aoqM of Immunity for
Turreou said he was leaving the 8. highway 66 a mile west of El Pies*, despite the fact that days _____ ___ _ _ ^ _____
rervtce partly because his health Reno when a car operated by Dr I will be gelling shorter from now ! I»rcenl wmm* retire nonVw'S 8uPM“ cl*‘r lh* W*T ,W eMMlW wtthtaTriUee
- Ha* suffered In recent month. Kunkel In the opposite direction I on" abl, warranu bearing 4 percent a .weeping series of maneuver. U ,ind,r alUck
MINNEAPOLIS Minn. June »l ! frorn the terrific strain Under f0llWw, y,e mtek. | Temperature* to date, he *atd.',n «*' ** With the tolec- «« r m* ^ - - ----------------
—(Ta -Oovemor Elmer A Be son wb|Cb I've worked" and also be- The plaintiff says bones In Ills have been a few degree* cooler
cf Minnesota puahad ahead ol hi* cau*e he wished to devote hi* time r|gbt band and wrtat were btoktn. than average,
challenger HJalmar Petersen for t0 writing
the Farmer-Labor nomination In
t U'fiHHimr StlirpH A**ordln« to 0. A. Lefty I point reported rain Id.bel had a
day TTte lead had changed hands
Irequer tly
Benson had a 4.438 lead on the
basis of 1841 of 3.739 precincts
In the stole
uoo Vihm Sn j o.nZ „ Th, mu i» » i««,«MSw»
, , teaching staff for th* D Reno The not*, constitute merely a "»*ny
(hat he suffered numerous severe Oklahoma skies were almost uni- fcbooia during the next term l* c)>*nge of one evidence of oblige- ----
bruises and cuU formlv clear yesterday Only one , .,raf)trallv (.nmni*tc Mr Tavlnt Hon lot another and consequently P/WMPVAlt RoiltP
Itotni »nccl.d Min Mabel bail i P ^ . K . ...Ukee eeeetaa . a« Itwleblnasi * H V "V II tV
TTie superintendent departed to-
W ('Hrlimr Stlll/pd BmrIIm '<> r A mu point rsportad rain
TUAItiill^ ‘ '"f'"' rhoinas, Canadian oouniy dcpuiy fall of .10 inch.
Ill I IfKlIllal I lore *1rrl,F who Invgsllgaird the frach. Hottest state points were Okmul-
r the Kingfisher man pulled out :o Vrr and Antlers, with recording*
pa** another car when the collision 0f 98 degrees Maximum* were
Rev W R Johnson, pastor of the ocpu!-,^
. , —. , . . ... , existing." the court declared
day for Chicago. Ill. where he will | •____
enrol for the first half of the
neither create* 1 ew Indrblednrvi ■■
1 nor increases i^ebtedwss already . |n 0Utlil1€Hl
... , First Method 1st church lu El Reno. _
Petersen'S volume built up with off|rla(M a| „.atriaKr Monday . . . . . vf
rural -»s »l*»he<1 h«vl|> |aftrnioot, of nank oll l)rr ,n<l AhatKlOIIVmMlt ()l
Haarl Whitney, both of Oalhip /si*IJ All I
n m ( nildren Alleged
The ceremony was performed At _
1 the Catto hospital, whers young In)tie M Wilds. 32. of El Reno ^
Ol*sener is being treated tor s pleaded not guilty of charge* nlleg-1
1 gunshot wound Ing child abandonment when hr
WltncMlmi the wedding were Mi' w*» arraign'd before Judge Emmett
when a hatch of hallots came In
from Mennettn countv < Minneap-
olis) Ber son's stronghold
The vole, with shout half the
precinct' reported, was: Benson
198.1881 Petersen 104.780. ■ ......i.ai wMin* in. -khji .i.. mi,-.. 1,. 1 Earewaat
Mrs Msvnsrd Ross of Fort "" OT1' ™ «.Mn™ mm ■.mm Partly rlotidv tonight and Wed-
Worth Tex |« a nest of Mr and Glascner mother of the Thompson In Canadian county newlsv becoming unaeltled In west
Mrs Havdn J Davis *13 Bmith 1 hTl,lr»room »nrt c * Whitney court Monday. Bond ws* set at |)PrMon Wednesday
Bock Island .venue and Mr* Maud f»^rr of »*£ hr,rtP * P^llmlnwry hrsr.ng w Hem. Weather
Will Ism' 4» south Mseomh see- OI-*ner 18 veara of age. I* one scheduled Mil R June 23
r Uf of two youth, who were wounded Information filed m the rase re- rDr ’ n0UI t>pr o<3 •n<unB
__ may It at Yukon when officer* late, that In October 1934 Wild* ® ^
Mr* Mauale Brboollng. 407 Mouth ] woiMtlit to question torm about an ..handuned his children. Bsrbara ,l * *"
Barker avenue ha* departed for alwndoned automnbllr Joe and Dnlorr* J«*n. now 7 and '*'p or wp*,hrr' r,p*r
*r extended visit with her dauth, | T*lr oU""' vouth 111* 34-year-old 16 ytar* of age reafieriively, and ha* Rainfall note
ter Mr* leo Onldher* and Mr Itrolher, Vic Olaaener. died the next neglected to contribute anything Bun rise* tomorrow at 4 83
OtMberf to Hcu'ton t*x jtoward their support j Sun sets today tt 7 11
generally in the 90s. Boise City nj Chicago to do further work to-
was Ir. IU usual role as coolest WKrd u,, draree of doctor of
|4illo*ophy. Mr Taylor will teturr
to El Reno July 34
Oklahoma point with a minimum
Inf 83 degree*
A’hina Strengthens
Hankow Defenses llln'rBnr U,rou,h 0kl•ho,n• pro-
SHANOHAI June 2l-(Ah—Chlrg
teorganised and »llengthened Han-
Sapul pa Resident 'JZZrZZflZ'LSZ
L ( '|i>> |||,t<<) capital remained stuck In the mud
IP V llal m 11 HIM bv the
river
Immediate Action Due
Hull probably will not wait until
the next session of congress to
proceed with hi* program He can
«ound out other nation* without
waiting for congressional approval
Kev Pittman .Democrat Nevada),
chairman of the senate foreign re-
lation* committee, declared the
Morni of protests In this country
agslnst bombings of clue* In the
tar east and Bpaln raised a quo*-
vide* for a speech dedicating the non to the military worth <>( such
Orand river dam at Disney and attack*
then s southern route passing
through Muskogee snd McAle*let
Sam Ciammer. campaign manager
for Senator Elmer Thomas, as-
hy the spreading flood of the Yellow j serted today
"We've talked to several per*
sons from Washington." mid Clam-
nier "A* far as they know the
Arraignment Held
On Murder (bunt
MUBKOOEF. June 31-4*1-
Bertha Tulley, II pleaded Inr
to a charge of murder when ar-
raigned todav In corneetion with
1
Fred Smith 40 of Rspulp« Kvrrv ^ * rtp|»v lo thp J*P*n‘
pleaded not guilty of drunk drlv- PM‘ b» lbp Chinese
Ing alien h» was arrsigned t» (cxe I,n hn,,,Pr afrsieglc points blocking president'* plan* are not altered
| Judge Emmett Thompson In Can*. expm'led to be Japan* line | Clsmmer said the pre»klenf*
, ... a, . “ dlan county court Monday Bon(1IO, deepw into d.lnas heart visit 1* "a* deflnlto as It cam be ths shaming Bundsr of Perry topp
in.' iiign mi, 10a ns. a( a,l00 Chine* leader* -aid rhlnese lines although no ofTIrlai announcement :<0-ve«r old 'tone mason |
the defendant sllesediv oner.ted "°W ^ v‘rttmll,r »****"« ► I J*» ha* come from the White I lopp waa found shot to death
a truck nn^n withstand any onslaught while House The president." ha said , at Mr* TUIIeV* Ivome at Haskell.
.iw,e. di.tlV., ” V,. 7,1 ™ Japan'* reeog"lred srmv *1111 -*• 1-has nn| Inlendsd rtopplnsl *1 Ok- Mr* Tullav told Sheriff True lor
..rr sissjarr’
_______ I grounded by rain jwett coast" land Upp shot Maadf.
inr 19 while tn
| condition.
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Dyer, Ray J. The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 47, No. 91, Ed. 1 Tuesday, June 21, 1938, newspaper, June 21, 1938; El Reno, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc920649/m1/1/: accessed April 23, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.