The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 52, No. 120, Ed. 1 Monday, July 19, 1943 Page: 4 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:
r
El Reno (Okla.) Daily Tribune
Doer
The El Reno Daily Tribune
A Blur Ribbon Newspaper Serving a Blue Ribbon Community
Issued dally except Saturday from 207 South Rock Island avenue,
«nd entered as second-class mall matter under the act of March J, 1879
RAY J. DYER
Editor and Publisher
BUDGE HARLE
News Editor
DEAN WARD
Advertising Manager
Tlie ASSOCIATED PRESS 1» exclusively entitled to the use of re
publication of all the news dispatches credited to It or not credited by
this paper and also to all the local news therein.
All rights of publications of special dispatches herein also are reserved
MEMBER
SOUTHERN NEWSPAPER
PUBLISHERS ASS'N.
MEMBER
OKLAHOMA PRESS
ASSOCIATION
DAILY SUBSCRIPTION RATES BY MAIL IN CANADIAN AND
BY CARRIER ADJOINING COUNTIES
One Week ________________| .20 Three Months ___________$1.60
Three Months___________ $2.25 Six Months_______________$3.00
one Year______________________$8 00 One Year_____________$6.00
Including Sales Tax
MONDAY. JULY 19. 1943
TALL BE AKERS SELDOM ARE JUST OR ACCURATE OR CHARI-
TABLE: The words of a talebearer are wounds.—Prov. 18:8.
Inside
the Axis
Presenting Facto AaaemMod
by the Foreign Service
Division of the Office of
War Information
Speaking of Ages—
Some chaps are #
Monday, July 19, 1943
Taxes Versus Inflation
^HE President’s original statement of the way to beat
1 inflation still remains the best summary ever made. It
was presented April 27, 1942. It called for seven steps:
(1) Heavy taxation to hold down personal and corporate
profits; (2) price ceilings; (.1) wage stabilization; (4)
farm price stabilization; (5) war bond sales; (6) rationing
of scarce commodities; (7) discouragement of credit buy-
ing, encouragement of debt retirement and savings.
This discussion concerns itself with Numbers 1 and
5—taxation and war bond sales. These are designed for the
double-barreled purpose of financing the war and siphon-
ing off excess money which, if used in the commodity
market, would promote inflation.
The simple way of stating the problem is to say that,
there being $40,000,000,000 (ini much money, all we need
do is borrow and tax $46,000,000,000, which would leave
just enough money to pay normal prices for the available
goods.
Following this line, congress would merely devise a
combination of tax and compulsory savings policy which
would take from each person his share of the excess $45,-
000,000,000. To an extent that is what tax plans thus fat-
have had as a goal.
But there is where the real trouble begins. What is
any man’s fair share of the $45,000,000,000 that needs to
be taken out of circulation?
* * *
IF everybody had l>een employed when the war program
began, and everybody’s salary or wage (or income from
dividends and interest) had risen by a standard percentage,
a practicable if hurd-boiled method could be found.
There were, however, millions out of work in 1939 who
now are earning good wages. There were millions employed
at subsistence levels who now are prosperous. There are
many—millions, actually—who are earning not one penny-
more now than they were in 1939. Some receive less.
Thus the buying power of somewhere between 10 and
16 miHion Americans has skyrocketed; the buying power
of perhaps as many more has increased greatly, but that
of a third big group lias decreased.
We can’t, justly, tax the group which has actually lost 1“"! »,.! 1* T? H 7T?’
in purchasing power as heavily as that wmch has profited !and vegetable* Adding that the
Importation of aurh products Is
almost Impossible on the war-con-
gpsted highways, the paper warn-
ed that the decision might have
disastrous consequences on Roman
morale
Tlte Na/as are apparently hav-
ing a difficult time finding collab-
orators among the oppressed Poles.
One of the most recent tndlcatlonr,
of this difficulty Is an article In
the German press of occupied Po-
land complaining about the short-
age of Interpreters, who were de-
scribed as "indispensable for the
solution of numerous military, eco-
nomic, administrative and political
questions "
* * *
rpHK Milan newspaper Corrlere
della Scrra disclosed that a
new Fascist decree calls for the
registration of all woolen mat-
tresses and pillows In Italian ho-
tels, pensions and lodging houses.
Under the decree, the paper said,
"all mattresses and pillows In the
possession of lodging places may
not be sold or altered, but must
be leapt at the disposition of the
ministry of war production.’* pre-
sumably for use In air raid evacu-
ation.
YJLf ASHINGTON. July 19 — <8pe-
” elab—Nasi Propaganda Min-
ister Joseph Ooebbels' newspaper.
Der Angrlff, recently published de-
tailed instructions governing work-
ers In bombed German factories,
as follows:
If a worker's house Is only
slightly damaged, he must report
for work at the usual time; work-
ers whose homes are destroyed or
badly damaged must Inform em-
ployers where they can be reached
and report for work within three
days after the raid.
2. If a factory is totally de-
stroyed. workers must still report
at the factory site for instructions.
Der Angrlff pointed out that this
was necessary because bombings
often Interfered with mall service,
leaving no other 'wav to reach the
worker. Employes of destroyed
factories, the paper added, must
place themselves at the disposal
of the labor office
3. If the factory is only partly
demolished, all employes must re-
port for work as usual, with those
attached to undamaged sections
doing their regular work while the
others clear up the damage. The
clean-up squads, said Der Angrlff,
should be divided Into groups of
30 to 40. with each group being led
by a factory foreman.
The section of the Oerman penal
code dealing with defamation ot
dead persons has been revised so
as to Impose serious penalties on
the detractors of German soldiers
killed In active service, according j
to the Nazi publication Deutsches
Recht.
A legal commission has changed
the code making defamation of a
dead person punishable with Im-
prisonment up to two years, said
the article. The publication added
that In the case of soldiers the.
penalty had been Increased to five
years’ Imprisonment, with the pub-
lic prosecutor being empowered to
Institute proceedings If the slain I
soldier's relatives fall to take ac-
tion.
_ * * *
cpHE Italian newspaper Oiornale
* d'ltalia has taken exception to
a decision by the Fascist city gov-
ernment In Rome to use ,all city
refuse for the making of methane
gas The newspaper pointed out
that the refuse dumps provide the
only source of organic fertilizer for
the truck gardens around Rome.
Other* ju*Tgve umt 55 AT 65 many are retires?
tHoCKi! WHAT COULP AN CAP
FuOOF DUDOV LIKE ME Oo
FOR. THE WAR EFFORT ?
T-HECK WITH
EVERyTHUstG/
I-M TAKING-
LIFE EAS>
fraw now owi'
Behind the Scenes
In Washington
BY mtg EPSON
NEA V\ ashing ton Correspondent
J’HE difficult problem of how to du-st rotenone powder on the un-
dersides of bean plant leaves, to disrourage the ravages of the
Mexican bean beetle and other victory garden pests, has stumped the
brains of the best agricultural experts lor years. But it has at last
been solved by a couple of very amateur lady
gardeners of Betherd.i. Md., a Washington suburb
enormously from war employment. So we veer toward an
excess income tux. to take away profits that have arisen
out of the war program.
That is what the treasury is discussing now.
The Germans finally swung into another offensive in
Russia. If they want to die with their hoots on 'tis all
right with us.
Plow
Points
By Tom M. Marks
County Agent At Large
^tTILLWATER. July 19— (Special)
Now Is the time to plow up
that .bermuda plot In a program
Hollywood
Film Shop
By Ernest Foster
United Press Correspondent
TTOLLYWOOD. July i9-<tj.R>-In
1918 Peter H. Denie, former
lieutenant-commander in the Im-
perial Russian navy, sank a Ger-
man U-boat. Twenty-four years
later in Hollywood he met the
captain of the sub
Salvage Plan
Makes Soldiers
Program Rehabilitates
Army ’Goldbricks’
PORT CUSTER, Mich , July 19
—(U.R)—The manpower salvaging
program of the Sixth Service Com-
mand is turning "goldbrlcks,”
"elghtballs,’' “guardhouse lawyers”
The former German officer was and other petty offenders against
playing extra bits. They recog- army discipline Into first class
nized each other at once. fighting soldiers.
rJT* 7T .^th ,ln • hurry'”| Port Custer's Rehabilitation and
Denie said. We planned to meet Detention Center for the rectama-
»u I ve never seen him tion of lost army manpower Is un-
ve searched many places der the command of lieutenant
Colonel Eldon W. Stenjem. Here.
Denie, now a crack cameraman j men sentenced for short terms ot
at Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. has the confinement at hard labor In army
again
since,
for him
Cross of St. George, highest award
for valor bestowed by Russia. He
also has the medal of St. Stanis-
laus. FVench Legion of Honor, the
St. George Sword, and others.
Denie Is an assumed name. I supervision
adopted when the cameraman be- trists.
prison camps are permitted to
spend the time at drill, study and
useful labor. Meanwhile, they are
undergoing mental and emotional
readjustment under the skillful
of trained psychla-
came an American citizen soon
after he arrived In this country.
“I have relatives in Russia and
Europe.” he said. “Until the war
Is over It’s best to keep the name
subrosa."
Lh/uvUl?r‘>OWder dU.u,n* u“nd PatUng earh ,to <*-str°y ^e grass so that
pretty leaf as carefully as though it were a shiny
pink nose being made up for a heavy date.
grown there next
When the Communists crawled into bed with
Boss Frank Hague of New Jersey the other day.
their real inside political strategy was said pri-
vately to have been determined by these motives:
Governor Edison of New Jersey was fighting
Hague That threatened a split in the Democratic
party for next year, giving the Republicans a
chance to carry the state in a clean sweep, de-
feating Democratic Congresswoman Mary Norton
of Bayonne, now chairman of the House Commit-
tee on Labor and decidedly er—liberal in her
views Rather than have that happen and give
the whole state delegation in Congress over to ultra conservatives
like New Jersey's Senator Albert W Hawkes, ex-president of the
U. S. Chamber of Commerce, the Commies figured they might freeze
out the decent Democratic element behind Edison and solidify the
state machine behind Roosevelt. Hague and Norton.
A case history and psychiatric
analysis Is made of each man ad-
mitted to the Center In an effort
to ascertain why he was unable to
cope with army life. These records
determine the treatment needed to
He recalled his first meeting with restore his usefulness as a soldier,
the German U-boat skipper. Denie At drill the men are their own
was commanding the Russian sub instructors; acting corporals and
K-9 on Aug. 14. 1918. j sergeants are selected on a merit
At dawn he sighted two Oerman basis and attend a non-commls-
transports off Point Zounguldak. sioned officers' school,
near Constantinople, now Istanbul Army specialist courses, as well
He sank them both and spotted as liberal arts, are taught and the
two enemy cruisers, the Goeben classes are well attended. The
and the Breslau, bearing down at only compulsory course Is Major P.
full speed. v. Wagley’s class In "behaviorism ”
"We started to zigzag and pre- According to Wagley, who Is form-
pared to crash dive.” he said, j er head of the Michigan State hos-
"They were firing at us and com- pital at Pontiac, the men are per-
ing close. mitted to discuss any subject that
"Just then a sub came to the]comes to mind. The discussions
surface on our port. It was the, often have led to Individual psy-
U-16 They were so close I could chologlcal adjustments
Edson
The law of gravity is just one more reason for not
turning up your none at people.
An Illinois woman, suing for divorce, says she can’t
live on $8<H» a month. Lots of others who would like to can’t
iliv,
Even the little kids sometimes don’t like substitutes
RpVead on their bread—liecause they’re old enough to
know butter.
pta
We certainly get some fine reports about our navy
aviators, for fellows who are up in the air one minute and
all at sea the next.
Down Memory I^ane
July !H, 1918
Joe Childers, accountant for the El Reno Wholesale
Grocery coni|»any, has resigned his position and will leave
Sunday for McAlester where he has accepted the position
of secretary and auditor for the Griffin Wholesale Grocery
company,
Arthur Sawallisch and Howard Collins have safely ar-
rived “overseas’ according to advices received today.
Miss Marie West will go to Ardmore tomorrow to join
her mother, Mrs. F. K. West, for a visit with relatives.
Paul Craden took his first lesson in Piscatology at
the North Canadian last night.
July 19, 1933
W. E. Fryberger, one of the few remaining pioneer
El Reno merchants, today was winding up Imsinens affairs
preparatory to retirement.
• Miss Kathleen McClain and Miss Mary Gibbs of Los
Angeles, Calif., were guests yesterday of the former's
uncle, Russell A. McClain, and Mrs. McClain, 116 North
Barker avenue.
Celebrating the birthday anniversary of her daughter,
P**ggy, Mrs. K. M. Bishop, 1218 South Macomb avenue,
entertained informally yesterday afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Maxey and son, Kendall, north
of the city, departed today for a week’s visit in Fort
Worth, Tex. %• «| 4tm 9
Miss Catherine Hovendon of Oklahoma City arrived
today for a several days’ visit with Miss Mary Grandjean,
116 North Hoff avenue.
Mrs. Sam Wsllnce and son, Joe, 218 North Barker
avenue, departed yesterday for a month’s visit at points in
New Mexico.
Mrs. Emerson R. Kelso, daughters Jerry Mae and
M«rriB Jane will depart next werV frr Chicsgo, III., where
they will spend the remainder of the summer.
' garden can be
j spring.
Plow or spade the ground now,
- While the soil is dry Is the best
time to kill grass If it Is physl-
j sally possible, plow It. Dryness
■ aids the gardener In destroying the
grass. And once the sod has been
j turned up. leave It rough.
After a time the grass will be-
gin to grow. When this happens
| the ground should be cultivated j
with a tool that will go deep and
stir the soil, preferably a disc or
i a sprlngtooth harrow. The object
Is to keep the soil dry and loose
1 until the roots are killed.
Repeat this process as frequent-
j ly as the growth of grass makes
I it necessary until frost. After the
first hard, killing frost, plow again
and leave the plot rough until
time to plant next spring.
A hot dry summer from now
on with a cold, freezing winter
following will do much to carry
out this program. After this has
been followed, vegetables can be
planted on the plot with the as-
surance that the bermuda can be
Look and Learn
1. Does a ream of printing pa-
per contain more sheets than a
ream of writing paper?
2. On what fish can a point be
cut off and another will grow li.
Its place?
S. How many signers of the
Declaration of Independence were
Roman Catholics?
4. Is It possible to raise vege-
tables without aoll?
5. What steamer was the first
to cross the Atlantic ocean?
ANSWER*
1. Yes. A ream of writing pa-
per contains 20 quires and a ream
of printing paper contains 21*4
quires
2. The star fish
2. One; Charles Carroll of Car-
rollton
4. Yes. In water that Is chemi-
cally treated
8. The Savannah.
MASCOT DECORATED
CORONADO. Caltf (U.SV—The 9-
month-oM canine pet of Col. Oil-
der Jackson, U.8.M.C., who was
also the mascot of the regiment,
has been decorated with a new col-
lar with a silver plaque bearing
the one word "Guadalcanal ” For
a long time the dog was the only
animal of its kind on the Island
and enjoyed chasing Hurds so
much (hat he never paid zny
attention to Japanese rifle fire.
H AH Food Administrator Marvin Jones’s first official order on his
’ new job was a routine matter, citing one Roland Mason of Hous-
ton, Tex., doing business as the Houston Cattle Company, for having
slaughtered 183,000 pounds of beef in April, when its quota was only
44.000 pounds. It was one of those simple affairs, probably prepared
by some underling far down the line in WFA's legal department.
This one, however, had a kickback in it that the judge didn't see
Down near the end of the order was a preamble reading. "Because
of the great scarcity of livestock for the fulfillment of meat require-
ments of ttie United States.” and so on. Texas Congressman Dick
KIceberg, of King Ranch fame spotted this in the official Federal
Register. Scarcity of livestock'' Meat animals were busting out the
fences all over the country. Kleeberg reached for his phone and got
Judge Jones to ask him if he knew what he had signed Redder than ! con,ro‘«‘d
usual in the face, he had to admit he hadn’t known that phrase was Another method, which can be
in the order. It was corrected, quick. utilized on the small plot. Is to
* * * spade up the ground now and
A RATHER conscious but strained effort is being made by backed I shake out the grass roots and de-
of both Vice President Henry A. Wallace and Secretary of Com- i stroy them Continue this until
merre Jesse Jones lo build up their recent tiff into a preliminary I every root has been removed Then,
bout for the coining economic battle of the century ' when spring comes, repeat this
Jones s supporters back their man as the last bulwark of democ- practice after everv rain until all
racy-if he is scuttled, all Is lost. As a matte, of fact. Uncle Jes^ ^
Jones is the one man in the government whom the younger intellec- ,, ,, , . .
tuals in government have picked out to hate moat. But Henry Wal- Us“*lly this method will be short-
lare may huve been inspired to deliver his blast because he felt hi** j n ration to the amount of
Board of Economic Warfare wasn't getting enough support from the ‘*u>ow u"*‘d by th* Pro«-
White House, particularly the new East Wmg Office of War Mobili- : Pectlve gardener. If not enough
lation organization under Justica James F Byrnes. Wallace might i time Is spent, however, the grass
have blasted at Jones publicly just to get the fight out in the open will grow faster than It Is being
ind line up the White House behind and in support of his ideas. destroyed.
““~~~~~~~~~— • Another method consists In re*
- moving all top soil to « depth of
j from 6 to 8 Inches or more This
; must be done methodically so that
‘ - with the top soil all bermuda grass
A haystack Is in the form of a WORDS OFTEN MISUSED Do roots are removed Usually ber-
cylinder 16 ft In diameter and 7 j not say. "Just listen at the rain." j muda grass roots penetrate only
ft high, surmounted by a cone 10 ! Say. “listen to the rain.” about 4 inches down, but some-
Problem a Day
Lesson in English
see the captain's face through my
periscope."
The K-9 submerged and hit clay
bottom so hard she rammed her
bow Into it and was stack there
14 hours. Depth bombs shook the
plates. The oxygen supply ran out
and it seemed they were doomed.
"Blood came out from our eyes States,
and ears." he recalled. “I ordered
release of the flares that lit auto-
matically when they surfaced.
Then I passed out. I woke up In a
hospital at Sevastopol. Two of our
ships had saved us."
Later at a naval Inquiry Denie
faced the U-boat captain who had
been captured.
The plan for the Center was
proposed by Major General H 8
Aurand, commanding the Sixth
Service Command. Impressed by
the results, the war department
Instructed other service commands
to organize similar schools, and
several now exist In the United
Viscount Halifax Has
Big lime at Farm Picnic
Wounded Soldier Held
As Burglary Suspect
L08 ANOELE8. July 19
Pvt Oeorge Walter Bauer. 22 years
old quoted by C. B Sylvester and
W R Hartley, police officers, as
admitting he deserted last month
from Camp Shelby. Miss., was shot
in the right foot by 8vIvester early
today.
PARMA. Idaho. July 19-0PV—Vis-
count Halifax British ambassador
to the United States, Is going to
tell the folks at home that he en-
joyed an American barbecue—al-
though he Isn't certain just what
that Is.
Touring Boise Valley rural re-
gions Lord Halifax ate a picnic
supper of cheese, chicken and ham
sandwiches, lemonade, raspberries
and cream and cherries at the F
lee Johnson farm home near here.
"I have always heard what fun
an American barbecue was." he said.
"Now I hope I san say correctly that
I have been to one. And anyway
Emerging from a cafe. Bauer I am going to write back to evary-
slugged Sylvester with a bag full of
coins, fled but was felled by the
bullet, the officers reported. Bauer
was booked In a Hospital prison
ward on suspicion of burglarizing
the cafe.
one in England and tell them I have
^ because they won't know whether I
mean a rhessy-cat or a motor show "
Actually the picnic was Just a pic-
1 nlc. A barbecue involves the roast-
J log of a beef over an open fire.
MOVIE ACTRESS
ft. high How many ton* of hay | OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED; tlnw>s lh*y 80 as deep as 10 Inches,
are there In the stack, allowing Hearth t*ronounee harth, the a as depending upon the past seasons
I In arm. not berth.
612 cu. ft to the ton?
ANSWER
3.57 • minus) tons Explanation
—Square '» of 15; multiply by
11418 (pi); multiply by 7; to this
add the product of the square of
OFTEN MISSPELLED Alumnus
i masculine •, alumna < feminine t;
singular Alumni, alumnae; plural
SYNONYMS: Exuberance.
W of 15. 11418. 10. and 1-3; divide | uberancy, plenty abundance ropl
the result by 512
Hoard Replaces Ration
Hook IiONt In Grave
and how long the land has been
sodded.
This method Is practical only on
a very small plot and soli must be
hauled In to replace that which
I has been removed.
HORIZONTAL
1,4 Plctired
movie actress
10 Body of water
14 Not high
15 Vegetables
18 So be It
17 Like
18 Put on
19 Paid (abbr.)
20 Aquatic birds
21 Car
23 Twirl
25 Part of "be”
28 Any
27 Three (prefix)
30 Tablet
k’rxs&ifrDt'E
^ineaooQ'’ *
BWrWmJ
mmr
4v; i Vltr
------- 50 City in Africa
33 Eskimo homes 53 Erbium
ouaness. profusion, excess, over-
flow.
WORD 8TUDY: "Use a word
three times and It Is yours." Let
us Increase our vocabulary by mas-
tering one word each day Today's
word OBTRUSIVE: disposed to
thrust Impertinently upon another
"A really educated and cultured
OREENVILLE, 8 C., July 18- |
<A*)--A Oreenvllle gravedigger told
the county rationing board hts ra-
tion books fell out of hi* pocket
and were covered bv ahovel after I Prrson «• •!! Uie le« obtrusive for
•hovel of dirt I h*» knowledge '
He shrank from the task of re- ~
covering them, so would the board I
please The board came across j
with replacements.
MODEL RAILWAY STOLEN
SAN JOSE Calif —(U.m—Just as
he waa departing for Induction Into
the armed force*. Alfred Colaclcco
wa* obliged to report to the police
the theft of an entire railroad sys-
tem. Including seven engines and
tenders. 103 cars, three transform-
er* and 260 feet of track. The rail-
road waa known as the Great Oen-
iral Hall road of 8anta Clara Val-
ley Colaclcco said he had packed
the railway system, valued at $600.
into 12 separate cases weighing 500
pounds, so that he didn't figure the
thtef had purloined It bv gny
Utiglit of huiul trick.
Service Manager At
Merveldt Motor Named
WllUam Albers has become ser-
vice manager of Merveldt Motor
Company Mrs. E. C. von Merveldt.
owner, said today
In addition to Albert, two other
mechanics have been employed to
assist him. Mrs Merveldt said
"In contradiction to reports over
the past few montlis that we were
going to close because of labor
shortage, I am pleased to make this
announcement regarding the service
staff I have secured We are now In
our 28th year In El Reno, and hope
te continue for ffinwtlon end thorr-
aliet,' Mrs. von Merveldt said.
Daughter Becomes Dad's
Sister By Adoption
80UTH BEND. Ind . July 1»-4A»)
—Dick L. Hosllnger, 22 years old. of
Mishawaka, has become the broth-
er of h la 9-month-old daughter
The strange twist of relationship
was made possible as county Juve-
nile court authorities approved the
adoption of the baby by Hosllnger
Hoalihgrr said the adoption would
permit him to enter the armed
services. HI* wife, Mrs. Artis Watts
Hosllnger. died last fall.
TAUGHT JAP GENERALS
8AN DIEOO, Caltf—(U.F—Tliefe
is one thing In the life of Major
John W McClaakey. 96, U8.M.C.,
retired, that he would like to for-
get This Is that SI years ago he
helped lay the foundation of Jap-
an's present svtatlon strength He
was Instructor to six young Jap-
anese who came here In 1912 to
train as pilots. All are now gen-
erals in the Japanese aviation ser-
vice gnd his best pupil. General C.
Yamsds Is bettrvrd to be at the
lieutl ol tin- Japanese aviation
35 Concerning
36 Each (abbr.)
37 Seine
38 Aluminum
(symbol)
39 Black bird
41 Transpose
(abbr.)
42 Individual
43 Age
44 Doctor of
Medicine
(abbr.)
45 Scorch
47 Lost color
Answer to Previous Puzzle 24 Illustrate*
27 Toward
28 Grained
shewpskin
leather
29 Island
30 Skin opening
31 Distant
32 She has cre-
ated steps lor
modern -
34 Lieutenant
(abbr)
36 Early English
(abbr) s
40 Virginia
(abbr.)
42 Unusual
44 Man s name
45 Drinks slowly
46 Nevada city
47 Commotion
48 English school
49 Short lance
60 Light brown
51 Indian *
52 Negative word
54 Sped
55 Beverage
58Spain (abbr)
59 Rhode Island
(abbr) r
60 Music not* “
(symbol)
55 Auxiliary
(abbr )
56 Symbol for
tantalum
57 On top
58 Growls
60 Pro
61 Gains
62 Small horses
63 Insect
VERTICAL
1 Exclamation
2 Organ of
smell
3 Compass point
4 Satellite
5 Tavern
6 Long Island
(abbr)
7 Trim
8 Finishes
9 Rupees (abbr.)
10 Plot of grass
11 Wine vessel
12 Knowledge
13 Abstract being
18 River barrier
20 She is a-
of popular
songs
22 Father
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. 52, No. 120, Ed. 1 Monday, July 19, 1943, newspaper, July 19, 1943; El Reno, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc920817/m1/4/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.