The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 48, No. 282, Ed. 1 Monday, January 22, 1940 Page: 4 of 8
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.
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—
I TWO
WAR IS mo
Sister of Altus Resident
Tells of Devastation
ALTUS. Jan. 22—tU.R)— China's
'var has all but disappeared from
American press, but to Mrs. Irene
Ooulter, a missionary to the
Chinese, it still is page one news.
What happens when Japanese
get ready to evacuate a city be-
fore superior Chinese guerrilla
forces is related by Mrs. Ooulter
ht a letter to her brother. Dr. i
S E. Goucher of Altus.
Mrs. Goulter Js stationed at
Hofei, a city occupied by the Japa-
nese at the time of her writing.
"Yesterday," she wrote. "A mes- |
senger came from an official of
the puppet government request-
ing the hospital to take in his
wife and family at the Japanese
had just suffered a heavy loss in I
the country hereabouts and were
going tc leave.
"Puppets Will Die"
"There are reported to be 10.000
Chinese troops about here, and
only a few hundred Japanese left.
These Chinese puppet officials who
are cooperating with the Japa-
nese will be killed the first thing
when the city is re-taken."
Mr3. Goulter said she saw dead
soldiers being brought, into the
city and that two high officials
already had been killed.
"The Japanese say that if the
Chinese re-take the city they will
come back and bomb it off the
face of the earth as if it were
not already about there. So we j
have been laying in a supply for
a possible seige.
"Yesterday morning about 4 a. I
m. I was awakened by hearing
a fleet of bombers passing over- J
head, coming back from a moon- |
light raid somewhere. Tills morn-
ing I heard machine gun firing i
and a cannon go off."
Vast Changes Observed
Mrs Goulter and her husband
onlv recently went to Hofei from
Nanking They had been in the
f owner city more titan 10 years
before.
EL RENO (0KLA.) DAILY TRIBUNE
-rr • .--:-;--
MONDAY, JANUARY 22, 1940
LAIMif
MERCURY, ECONOMY CAR COMING HERE ON TEST RUN
I Forecaster Is Maintaining
Perfect Record
VANCOUVER. B. C.. Jan. 22—(U.R)
• —If Edgar C. Thrupp is right, then
Sir Isaac Newton was wrong. New-
ton’s law of fravitation is chal-
lenged because Tiirupp has a per-
j feet record for predicting earth-
quakes—on a theory that denies
Newton’s law
Thrupp. an amiable scholarly, J
retired civil engineer, has been
called the "earthquake man" <a!
title he sccrnsi, because he fore-
cast the destructive Ankara earth-
quakes starting Dec. 26. and those
which occurred in North America
from Nov. 7 to 23.
Last June. Thrupp made 24 pre-
dictions for 1939 and 1940. These
were not "locking the bam" pre-
dictions but were set down on
I paper eight months ahead and
w
c
MIMS
Plan Is Designed To Use
Surplus Grain
UP AND AT 'EM! — Somewhere off California coast, in war
9ames, is mythical naval enemy about to attack mainland. Thesa
soldiers of 30th Infantry get practice to spike enemy it ho
attacks in Monterey sector.
Peppery Latin Dishes .
Are Cheery In Winter
By JUDITH WILSON
E*OR a novel and stimulating meal' bake until very dry. about a \'3
* c
on a bleak wintry day, serve a hour. Then chop up fine onion,
Latin dinner. Spicy and satisfying, garlic and red peppers and saute
tire mealy tamale, frljoles, tender with butter until golden brown.
Prom the denot to the Ht.v 1 beef doused jn pepper, pale gold Add chicken and Worcestershire
y 1 saffron rice and other such dishes sauce, and a dash of salt and pop-
are suggestive of sunnier climes per. Stir well together to form a
—— paste. Add gravy and mix well.
Spread evenly a thick layer of
gate." she wrote, "is now Just
barren country and when we left
In 1927 is was a prosperous city.
At the city gate our baggage was
.examined.
"The first thing that struck
me was the high grass and weeds
everywhere. Formerly all the grass
Wnd weeds were cut before they
Wire grown in the mad scramble
.fyr fuel. Now down the main street
't lie re is nothing but ruins. All
the once prosperous shops are
ripnuded of goods doors, roofs and
even many of the walls. It is said
that thousands of boatloads of
loot were rent out from this city
,ie Japan
world. By the middle cf Jnn. 11 pf
them had taken place.
Revises Law of Gravitation
The whole thing hinges upon
I the fact thnt Thrupp has re-for-
rnulated Newtotv's law of gravita-
tion.
"Newton was wrong." he declares.
“If he was right there wouldn't be
any earthquakes."
“I’m not going to explain my
laws to you,” he says. "You
wouldn’t understand them. But
anybody can understand the facts.”
Tlie facts are that Thrupp lias
predicted earthquakes, and earth-
quakes liave occurred. He has pre-
dicted auroral displays and they
have occurred. He has predicted
suns|>ots and Just that kind of
sunspots have appeared.
SrleniisLg Get forecasts
What’s more, his predictions
have been registered months in
advance witli the Royal society
and the Royal Astronomical so-
ciety.
He predicted small magnetic dis-
turbances for Aug. 1. They oc-
; curred. A magnetic storm pre-
|dieted for Aug. 1 was observed by
I Imperial Airways trans-Atlantic
| filers the night of Aug. 10-11.
He predicted magnetic storms
and auroras Sept. 15-16 They
started Sept. 14 and continued to,
Shown above, at the left, is
James E. Berry, lieutenant govern-
or of Oklahoma, signing the log
book starting the official Mercury
economy run. Tom Bullock, right.
Mercury supervisor for the Okla-
homa City branch of the Ford
Motor company, is driving the of-
ficial test car cn it’s 14-day ctr-
Mercury dealers. The car will
in El Reno Jan. 26.
The notarised log book will be
open for public inspection showing
mileage covered, amount of gaso-
line and oil consumed and total
cost of operation. Gasoline con-
sumption is registered accurately
by the visible gasoline meter
OKLAHOMA CITY. Jan. 22—(U.R)
—The idea of transforming the na-
tion's surplus grain Into industrial
alcohol for use in motor fuels had
a new champion today.
John Veseck.v of Kansas, nation-
al president of Farmers’ Union,
said he recommended to Secretary
of Agriculture Henry Wallace thnt(
j $10,000,000 be set aside for the'con-1
[structlon of alcohol manufacturing1
1 plants. Vesecky is a member ofj
|Wallace’s agricultural advisory'
j council.
oon-'
cular tour throug h Oklahoma and i mounted on the rear of the hood
northern Texas, stopping at all ’In
conjunction with this econ
be j omy run. we have equipped a rep- Addressing the Oklahoma
i Jica of the test car. which is a vention of the Farmers’ Union,
regular stock car Mercury 8, with | Vesecky said experiments in west-
the same visible meter,’’ explains ern Oklahoma and elsewhere "liave
Charles E. Wade, manager of the shown that a mixture of alcohol
Buick Turner Motor company. El and gasoline will run automobiles
Reno Mercury dealer, "and we art efficiently.”
inviting the public to moke their j ..jt ^ estimated that a solution
own tiial tests to see how far tl»eyj0f jq percent alcohol and 90 per-
^n_,ltf“vel on sine-tenth gallon oi cent KRSCiine would consume the
ai ricukural produce from 50800,000
gasoline."
Sandwiches Bring Romance I Cowboys Begin
DINNERS
Hot Chicken Tamales with
Red Kidney Beans
Mixed Raw Vegetable Salad
Gelatin Dessert Culler
Spanish Candied I’cel
Mexican Meat Balls with Hominy
Meselado
Chicory and Radish Salad
Fruii Cup Coffee
Here are a few recipes simplified
for home use by Carl Lopez, inaitre -
d’ hotel at La Conga In New York.1
whose specialties are In the best about 4x7^nchesr‘8prinkleHwdh
lyod traditions of Cuba. Argentine >alt and pepper. Make s mixture of
i Buenos Anps, Rio de Janeiro and bread crumbs, beaten egg. grated
cornmeal on each dinner plate and
put chicken mixture in the renter.
Serve with hot red kidney beans.
Serves 6.
MEXICAN MEAT BAI LS
2 fits, round steak cut inlu
thin slices
Salt and iicpper
1 i cup bread crumbs
1 egg. well beaten
1 medium onion, grated
cup melted butter
Flour
2 cups soup stork
Cut steak slices into small pieces
To First Lady Of Memphis
MEMPHIS. Tenn.. Jan. 22—(U.R)—
A former New Ycrker is the first
lady of Memphis, down on the
Mississippi where cotton is king.
"I was an army girl," explained
Whoopee Year
Modern Etiquette
By ROBERTA LEE
seres every year." he said.
Motorists Offer Aid
Motorists in sevwnl Oklahoma
towns volunteered during 1938 and',
1939 for 30-day toots of the fuel.
- i Vesecky said grain surpluses couli
CHEYENNE. Wyo., Jan. 22—OI.R) be converted into alcohol and stored
j—The Wyoming cow-ccuntry, last for years without deterioration. Ho^
(“frontier" of the old wild west. Is .said he wrote Wallace that the ex-'
: staging a year-long celebration of i pedlent "should not do as much
; the 50th anniversary of the state's i damage to tlie oil business as thet
. ____| arlmicui/An Af VanA'/iiol/ian un/I
", *
J
lovely, prematurely gray, Mrs. q. ts a friend who does not: admittance to the union in a series i admission of Venezuelean and
Dorothy Wyeth Chandler, wife of possess the least trace of envy observances which promises to Mexican oils.”
Walter Clift Chandler, who retired worth cultivating? (make the "cowboys’ Saturday' T,lc alcolujl could be manufac-j
from congress to become mayor of a. Yes, because tills friend in all might" of n half-century ago look! Lur*(t economically only when grain'
Memphis and crown prince of probability has mnnv other virtues i tame 1P*’1'*8 were low. lie said.
Memphis' famed political leader According to La
E. H. Crump. "The most certain
While visiting her mother’s rein- bern with great qualities is to be mlLll th- venr hB5 ^ ’ l"* *>----------------------------j
lives at Athens. Ga. one dav back bom without envv." . : . y. .T41 , 16111 buy “a normal amount" of Amei*i-
In 1917, she was serving sand-1 Q 8hould a pretty girl in an of- ushP™" 111 A «old®" annlversa,'y; can farm products.
.„. _____1 _________ _ ! commission is drafting complete;
' other virtues. | tame.
Rochefoucauld.1 Thc 365_dav Dartv te9I, on ,an i v<s“ky announced he also wgedj
s, t rs!i“ s
Sept. 17,
Nov 8 to 20 he said would be a
dangerous time. Temblors occurred
in California. Japan. Oregon. Wash-
ington. British Columbia Eastern
U. 8 Nicaragua, Juneau, Turkey
and the Mississippi Valley Nov. 7.
12. 14. 20 and 23
Between Dec. 26 and Jan. 10,
said Thrupp’.* predictions, "a much
more destructive earthquake, on a
plupger persistency," Lieutenant and
later Captain Chandler kept the
mails heavy with letters to his
army sandwich girl After fight-
ing in the battles of San Mlhtel.
Meuse-Argonnc. and the Woovro
Foresters Face
New Problems
---- ---------- --------------| UUUH UIU U'Ui UH/UOC imvr IRXII
Offensive fie returned to Menmhts WASHlNCT0N Jttn’ 22-(U.R>- j staging special observances Varl-| mund at the city hall The workers
Viame a hTwver.^ri .SrS Ks Amerlcan “«- ous state departments and boards |wcre represented by the Journey-
*Wyeth 1,1 1925 tion a,lnounees tbal a national. are planning to Join the celebra-1 men Mechanics’ societies which cb-
Th,. ..... fir,, foreslry conference 10 ** held at itions without special expense. | tamed a io-hour day for its mem-
f s’ !• 2 and 3- wUI: Ocvernor Nels H. Smith said the; bers.
Ton Of Honev Found
Under Shingled Roof
LUVFRNE. Minn.. Jan 22—(U P
—Henry Fenstermaker hired a j
carpenter to reshingle the rorf of
his home and the workman found
n ton of honey between the roof's
rafters.
Bees, entering an opening at a
errnlee. had made their home In
the attic of the building—fer how
long. Fenstermker does not know
J old Spain.
HOT CHICKEN TAMALES
1 lb. corn meal
1 quart hoi water
1 i> medium onion
1 small rlove garlic
4 small hot rei. peppers
1 tablespoon Puller
1 ■: lb. rooked chicken, diced
1 teaspoon Worcestershire
sauce
Salt and pepper
4 tablespoons gravy or
tomato soup
I large can red Iddiirv beans
onion, melted butter and season lo
taste. Spread mixture oil pieces ol
meat, roll and fasten with tooth-
picks. Sprinkle these rolls gener-
ously with flour and brown ir.
melted butter. Add stock and sim-
mer gently for 2 hours or until
tender. Remove toothpicks and
place meat on a hot platter. Sea-
son gravy, thickening slightly with
Hour if desired, and strain over the
meat.
Serve with hominy made as fol-
lows: Wash 2 cups hominy in sev-
eral waters, put In upper section
anniversary Commission will be ex
panded scon to include a state-
wide membership The governor
said the commission, which he
leads, is composed of heads of the
department of commerce and in-
INEU’EN/.A HITS
HOBART —4U.R'— Widespread de
creases in Kiowa county school at
tendance beenuse of Influenza have
been .reported recently. In some
wma'ls. as high as 25 percent ot
the total student registration was
hanked absent because of Illness. 1 chicken which "rode the rods" of a
a, | ......... III I ■WtllVIl
Cook com meal in hot water for of double boiler with !a cup bacon
ibout ^ an hour or until nil the fat and 1 teaspoon salt. Cover with
water is absorbed Place in tiled- water and steam over hot waiet
urn ovrn i35o deg-ees F.> ami until soft slmut 2 hours).
par with that in Chile in January capital of the new industrial mid- confer urgent forestry problems
struck Turkey..causing such loss ol Southland. i ^
life and property that foreign: The daughter of a New England 1 ... . , ..
countries sent aid to the Ankara aimy su*eon. the late Lieutenant- . Wt h l^e o«^«)s ouislariduig
government. Coicnel M. C. Wyeth and a Georgia f0reStry authonties attending, the | dustry. the department of educa-
Aunras as Predicted belie Mrs. Lucia Horton Wyeth.'conference w111 consider bringing tlcn, slate library and historical
A minor triumph follow im hot | Mrs chandler was born at Hot the VBSl t01,6*" arc*s of the south- department and landmarks corn-
oil the success of Ills year'end fore- Springs. Ark., and retired in Wash- ern states >mder better forestry 1 mission.
cast was his warning of strong' ington She later lived in New management. Particular attenlion j Smlth sflM hp wU, nppo|nl Ccun-
niagnetlc disturbances and bill- York where she married Captain wl11 ^ focused on the pulpwood tv d,airmcn and wU1 ask mayors
hum auroras for Jun 1 to 4 Chandler. ‘mport situation, upset by the AI-! of a], cllles luul lowas ^ rtPVe
This storm produced consider-. The Chandler inauguiation as blockade and Canada’s own j with lhe county organizations
mayor of Memphis heralded the wal needs. j Communities and counties will
! south s new, more anti more ap- The association believes that be asked to gather displays of hls-
Happy Home Is Found
By Rod-Riding Chicken
Woodpecker Repairs
Damage To Standpipe
able dtslocaUrn of trans-continent-
nl telegraph lines.
Here are two of Thrupp's warn-
ings for 1940
July 20-Aug. 5 Tills period will
bring tlie most destructive earth-
quake ol Hits epptury, probably, in
those cojuitries iliere they have
occurred Ignore, TIif main shock
will come between 6 and 9 p. nr.
parent, significant era cf economic control of the southern forest
and industrial expansion. areas and lhe blockAdc are similar
'Tlie south can and should build , United States problems because
an industrial empire. Just as New fast-growing plnelands will be
England has done, and Memphis cp*,! upon to supply domestic
**}°uld, lts capital. Mayor; nMd( tn addition to those of,
Chandler declared ’Tills was un-, Cana(1a Furthermore, it is said, in
torical relics.
Commemoration cf Important
military engagements and the
marking of their sites will be un-
dertaken by communities near the
those of, battlegrounds
der way before the Civil war, when
DURANT, Jan 22 (UP' A "hobo"
Ic^in Dr J
physician, said
FREE
! i
WEST CHICAOO. 111.. Jan 22
(U.R)— FoH several days a leak In
Most of tlie inflpenia is of a light I freight train from Durant to Deni- the standpipe which stored the
L Adams, county I sou Tex found a happy ending to clty water supply worried Super-
its adventures. Its now the most im«ndant cf Public Works F E
promising egg-layer in the hen Behooht Suddenly the leakage stop-
house of Victor Dninib. railway .)r(|
engineer. 1
Drumb first sow Uir chicken, a , "Upon Divestlgatlon, ” Scliacht
white Leghorn, when he climbed explained lo tlie city council. "I
down from Iris cab in Durant. H< discovered that o woodpecker luid
chased it and It disappeared under attempted to enlarge the opening.
up the mid Jn doing so had lost his bill,
which is still plugging the hole."
P 8. T. This oeeaslon will compart Memphis was next to live fastest
with the disasters hi Asia Miner■! i rowing city in Ainencs, nnd when
on Aug. 13 and 8ept. 5. 1822 when New Orleans rivaled New York as
20.000 people were killed
Oct 20-Nov. 10- Second period of
event of a long and destructive
war In Europe, the forests of the RujfKCCI I'arm Life Rest
United States may be called upon For Youth, Says Author
a port "
The new mayor typifies the
greatest earthquake risk Tlie mam j change in
si locks will come between 4 and 8 ershlp from colorful, lesther-lunged
p id P 8 T This will compare oratory to solid statesmanship He lnclude
to supply raw materials needed for
rehabilitation.
southern political lead-. U U P°ln,wl ou* ,hat *««««
,-ninrft.i iAaiHAc.iim»AH management oi the forests must
adequate forest
with tlie disasters In Chile. Nov 25 1 Is one of nine children, the son of Iteoticn; B sustained yield logging house—without central heating
1821 when -900 miles of the Chilean I a Tennessee railway mall clerk He Pr»c‘l<*; better balance between telephone, radio, hot or cold run-
const were affected. worked his way through tlie Un!-;annual harvest and annual growth ning water.
-,- ——---— verslty of Tennessee law school nnd | °f ®*i lands devoted to pulp- She told the Massachusetts
T/s\ng Dun..L<>Kw |Tu;nir wrote tlie Chandler bankruptcy act, and inlenslficatlon of field Federation of Women's Clubs that
c ii j " , praised by attorneys over the nn-, research in wood chemistry
Same Ifrand Differently tton including supreme coun jus
BOSTON, Jan 22—<U8»)— Mrs
Bertha Damon, author of "Orand-
ma Called It Carnal," thinks chll-
flre pro- | dren ahculd be reared in a farm-
house—without
MAP
Et'HOPE!
.lust call fit our store and
pet your map free!
He gave
Zenith
Radios
For
1940
a freight
hunt.
But when he got out of the en-
gine at Denison he spied the chick-
en. ihls time porclied contentedly
on a rorl under a car.
THIKE REPLACES TIRES
FA^L RIVER Mas*. <U R) It
i was a considerate thief who stole
How do you know it was u
woodpecker and not eorroslon
which plugged the leak?" asked
City Attorney R M White,
"Because,'' replied sehncht, "I
have made a study of woodpeckers.
This wns a very rare woodpecker.
. three slightly used automobile In fact, it was a Phloctomus Pllea-
] tires from tlie home of Ralph tu», with a wedge-siia|ied bill which
Raeeone In their plRee he left Is practically |ierf*srl for stopping
three old tires.
leaks in a .standpipe,"
Any Model
E*s; Tunis
I Aft us demonstrute for
you. why Zenith is always
a year head.
TANNER
ELECTRIC
Phone 281
BEAUTYREST
AU8TIN, Tex., Jan.
A brand marking a
22 —(U.R)—
tire William O. Douglas
!■ His Inaugural speech cm 1 ling for latlve Wall Doxey. Mississippi:
steer with a'the consolidation of overlapping | James O K McClure. Asheville,
"Lazy S," a "Bar X" cr other . city nnd county departments will N. C„ president of the American
well known rancher’s brand no make for a new deal In Tennessee, Forestry association, and others
longer Is proof positive that the 11< I* believed. For ns Memphis goes. _1_
branded nnlmn! belongs lo a parti- g°rs the state. Tills lias been,
cular owner [ the political watchword during the
young people are too pampered
leading speakers of the Urree- (and spelled with easy living and
day conference will be Represen- nis result aren't able to cope with
the difficult years ahead of them
TREE OTTLEANS TOWER
YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK
Call!.. (U.R)—National iwrk officials
here boast thnt in n towering 8e-
In the Mariposa grove of
LOR BETTER HI ST unrt BETTER
HEALTH In Ibr COMING TEAR.
EASY
TERMS
$1.00
DOWN
$1.50
IMS?
iii
A MONTH
you'll sleep lirlter. ftr| better III,iii you rver have before
If you nun ,i Be nut) rest (.111111111 teed lor ten years!
COX’S
110 North Hick ford
I'hone 85
HE THRIVES ON 13s
SANTA ROSA. Calif. ODD—Hkrry quoin ..........„T__w,
A ruling of the suite legal de- <*llnrter J^otury of wtntewldc Branch's hobby is collecting ’’13s.’ Big Trees they have more than a
(dominant* under Chandler’s patron. Last year he obtained bicycle It- ! rival for the Leaning Tower of
'Crump, thc Memphis "Red-8nnp-, cm* No, 13, at 13 minutes past ! Plsn Tlie tree, known as the
P®1 12 o’clock on June 13 and left for Grizzly Olant. Is estimated to be
Consolidation Is the doac poUU-a bicycle trip of 1.300 miles In 13 3.800 years old. Is 209 feet high,
cal sclenUsts nnd economist.', pre-: days. This year, arriving too latellenns 18 3 feet of renter or ap-
•crlbe for the South's govern men- ,0 gft Hcen.se No IS he took Ho. proxlmttely 4 degrees ami 58 mln-
tal structure ridden with tnnum- 1313 instead, utea
S" braiuied jcrnble county governments dating — •' —-
partment has held that one or
more persons may register tlie
same brand, provided the secend
and later users specify it shall be
placed on u different section of
the animal.
T|ius a. reclining
on thc shoulder 91 one steer rtiay back
mean U belongs to one innch Thc
snm* brand on the side might des-
ignate another.
_-r-'
to colonial
days and pat- ;
terned after the old magisterial
system of England.
The Chandlers have two chU-1
dren. a daughter. Lucia May, nnd j
HEIGHT OF PRECAUTION n *on' Wyeth. Mrs Chandler
CHICAOO (UP)—'The height 0f j described Jiar husband:
PMcautlon. states the current !*• uc "T'm '■"Vlng lie’s handsome, (
of Field Museum News. Is exempli- but hp l0‘,k‘< K00d 10 mr Hp h*,i
fled by the African wnrthog This “ r0"nd' be8mlna' cheerful face
susplcicus crenture." nteordlng iol*nd n Wndency. I would say to-
the bulletin. fears n. lake 11 wnrfl P'»impness He's good com
eyes from the direction of possible
approach 0 feiiemles. so it always
b«cks into its burrow"
pnny. He never worries Hr doesn’t
mind going to o|»erns and run he
persuaded to wenr n drew* suit."
Mr and Mrs, Don While of
Huntington, W Va„ are spend-
ing a location at points in Florida
and Cuba, according to word re-
ceived by her brother-in-law and
stater. Mr and Mrs Noland Bmlth
730 South Miles avenue
PIN MTK’KER OETN.AO DAYS
OAKLAND Calif (U,ft) *40lmi O
Hayes, aged 19. was sentenced to
tin lays in Jail for stlcklmt pins in.
people lie told Judge Clirte B Fog '
that he really derived pleasure
from the practice and re/inrdrd It
"verv fnnnv ”
I'll never In* a public speaker Here’s why:
A group was talking and I suit!; "I like milk and
crackers for Sunday supper.”
Paul Taylor auya: "I like to take one medium
Hix.ed bowl, one aoup or deanert spoon slightly less
than mouth size, one bottle of milk, a caddy of
fresh Halted crackers. Shake milk, remove cap
without pushing in, fill bowl. Break crackers in
howl of milk, Stir gently with a slightly chopping
motion. Absorb result to aaticty. Peanut butter
served on the side and spread on an occasional
cracker gives a French touch to this simple meal
nnd relieves Its inherent austerity.”
Guess I will not try speaking and keep on
trying to make FHA loans.
LUTHER GADRERRY.
HURRY!
We still have some brand
19.19
new
KELVIMATORS
■■$60
AT SAVINGS
UP TO
No more at (lime Bargain
Prices!
Davis Electric
PHONE 2*0
"Wr Do dumbin':.
wiches to soldiers on a troop train flee expect special favors because! ™miJIL‘lt' i "This would prevent any coun-)
stopping for three hours at thc of her sex? 'plans for volunta,'V observance of, try from using all Its American
Athens station. Suddenly display- A Never. Her posttion depends1 the state s pntry int0 the union on! “,edlts t0 bu.v armaments, then
ing a marathon appetite for sand- upon her efficiency, and she is not;July 10' 1890 j purchasing Its foodstuffs elsewhere,"
wiches, Lieutenant Chandler. 114th there to be courted or petted. ; Although such events as page- be explained,
field artillery. Memphis stayed Q Wliat would be a good toast jn,lts' Plays and other such hlstor- j "The United States will have
near Miss Wyeth for almost the to give at a wedding anniversary?' teal programs have been planned, I sreat difficulty in recapturing farm
entire three hours. They didn't see A "May your coming anntver- j the real celebrating is expected to 1 exP°rt markets once it loses them,
each other again until after the saries be outnumbered only by your be done by the bronzed steer-pi-1
war. coming pleasures.” 'lots who come out of the liard-
Calling on what he terms "my -- jbocts country every week for re-
laxaticn after a period of hard I
ridinR.
Building Strike Records
Of 99 Years Ago Found
ST LOUIS. Jan. 22—(U.R)—Rec-
The cost of the party, where any I ords of a strike called 99 years ago
. expense is involved, will be borne I Uv construction workers on 8t.
by thc Individual communities J Louts' old courthouse have been
They had been working 12
and 14 hours a day prior to the
strike.
The records were referred to the
national park service, which has
asked for all available historical
Information concerning buildings
which are to be preserved in the
Jeffers'n Riverfront memorial.
Co-operative Marketing
Of Tomatoes Proposed
HOLDENVILLE. Jan 22—(U.R)—
Hughes county farmers in the
Calvin and Atwood districts may
enter co-operative marketing 01
j tomatoes this summer.
At a meeting to discuss the pro-
| posal. it was indicated that facil-
ities of the Huglies County Water-
melon Growers’ association would
| be extended to provide marketing
, of tomatoes if at least 100 acres
1 of planting in that crop con be
promised.
Watermelon f rowers also Indi-
cated that thev will Increase their
acreage In 1940 About 1.000 acres
In melons were Ranted In 1939
and farmers said they were satis-
fied with the prices they received
\
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Dyer, Ray J. The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 48, No. 282, Ed. 1 Monday, January 22, 1940, newspaper, January 22, 1940; El Reno, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc920786/m1/4/: accessed April 23, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.