The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 48, No. 201, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 18, 1939 Page: 4 of 6
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FOUR
EL RENO (OKLA.) DAILY TRIBUNE
The El Reno Daily Tribune ^TAIT PPfllJP IN
A Blue Ribbon Newspaper Serving a Blue Ribbon Community UlfllL UIVUUI
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER
Issued daily except Saturday from 207 South Rock Island avenue,
and entered as second-class mail matter und^r the act of March 3, 1879.
RAY J. DYER
Editor and Publisher
BUDGE HA RI.E
News Editor
DEAN WARD
Advertising Manager
The ASSOCIATED PRESS is 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 publication of special dispatches herein also are reserved.
MEMBER
NATIONAL EDITORIAL
ASSOCIATION
MEMBER
OKLAHOMA PRESS
ASSOCIATION
DAILY SUBSCRIPTION RATES BY MAIL IN CANADIAN AND
BY CARRIER ADJOINING COUNTIES
One Week _________________$ .15 Three Months___________$lj>0
$1.75 Six Months________________$3.00
Year....______________$5.00
Including Sales Tax
Vocational Education
Discussed
THE WITCH HUNTER
Three Months......
. $1.75
Dne Year_________
$7.00
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1»M
WE ARE NOT TOYS WOUND UP: lor in Him we live and move and
have our being.—Arts 17:28.
The Voice of Highway Safety
Notes from Oklahoma Patrolmen’s
Big Brown Books
kKI.AHOMA CITY. Oct 18— i injuries when he attempted to turn
AL_______
Ve i Spec mil Members of the Ok-1 in front of a passing aub mobile
BY TRIBUNE CORRESPONDENT
YUKON, Oct. 18—Administrators
of vocational and industrial arts
education met Saturday st Yukon
in the public library.
The heads of these departments !
in the schools at Tulsa, Oklahoma
City, Ponca City. Shawnee. Enid.
Newkirk Muskogee. Henryetta, We-
woka. Sapuipa Bristow. Sand
Springs and Yukon were present
The meeting took up for dis-
cussion three topics related to in-
dustrial education. T.iese were
“Safetv Education". “Evening Clas- j
res," and “The Responsibility of
School for Preparation of Pupils
for Life Occupations."
Mr. and Mrs. .1 A Floyd and
daughters, Wllnn and Montie Mae.
•pent Sunday in Oklahoma City
with Mr and Mrs. Bryan Floyd.
Jessie W Johnson of Marlow
and son Bert Johnson of Hearne.
Tex., were visitors ol their son
and brother. Claude Johnson, and
Mrs. Johnson, last week.
Mrs Fay Porta and father. W.
H. Gibson, werr Sunday dinner
guests of Rev. and Mrs. O. L
Gibson and family in Stillwatci.
Mr. and Mrs. Tye Bledsoe and
son. Charles, spent tie week-end
in Marlow with relatives.
Rex Bellslc of Oklahoma City
Irnnsartcd business in Yukon Sat-
urday.
Miss Eiuiico Bondurnnt pent the
lahoma patrol are attending train- j on the highway near Healdton.
tng schools conducted by the de- j * * *
partment of public safety and the : A Tulsa motorist who attempted
federal bureau of investigation from ! to stop ills car suddenly stepped
Oet. 16 through Nov. 11 In four:on the gas instead of the brake
state cities. j and as a result crashed into a
A session opened at Chcrckee1 telephone pole Tlie car was de-
Oct 16 to continue through Oct molished and the driver Injured.
21. Others are scheduled at! * * *
Pawlmska Oct. 23 through Oct. 28. J Attempting to step from one
at Clinton Oet. 30 through Nov. 4., moving Truck to another near Altus
and „t Holdenvillc Nov. fi through j the ether day resulted In a Mid- i week-end in E! Reno with her par-
ii .'.:u fanner's being run over imri | **nts.
Members of the patrol are paying ! seriously Injured,
their own expenses during the | * * *
training periods so that there will i One year in the state reformatory
lie virtually no extra expense to i ut Granite was the sentence given
the state in connection with theja Ouymon motorist recently after
campaign to further the patrol's hi* arrest by patrolmen for drunk-
efficiency In crime prevention and j cn driving
detection, in traffic control and in , * * *
courtesy to the public. I A Dallas motorist paid a $75 fine
Not more than a fourth of th<i In Bryan county court the other
patrolmen will be in any sehooS; day for reckless driving
at one time, and members nod j * * ♦
required to be in a class are work- ! Under an order issued by Okla-
ing overtime on the highways ihlioum City's new chief of police,
order that there will be no letdown j drunken drivers will be turned to
in the supervision of highway; county court* on first arrest Here-
traffic. On an average day pa-1 tofore it lias been the policy to
troimeu are in school from 6:30 u fine first offenders in city court,
m. to 6 p. m. Some night classes --
also are being held Machine Is Invented
To Kill Boll Weevils
Advanced training is being given
in accident investigation and re-
portin'! courtesy to the pul
motor vehicle care, police ballistics, ■ GREENVILLE, Ga.. Oct !8—(U.R*
fingerprint identification, the Inw Morgan Williams, 55, Is the
of seizures state laws, handling ol Inventor of a machine that will
Mr. and Mrs. N. O Johnson of
Oklahoma city spent Sunday in
Yukon with relatives.
Mrs. Allle Enlow is reported to
be seriouslv ill at her home.
Mrs. Charles Floyd, son. Men’ll,
Mrs. J L. Vnndpnberger and
daughter. Shirley, all of Oklahoma
Citv were Saturday nl';ht guests of I
Mrs. Floyd’s parents, Mr and Mrs
I. A Floyd, and family.
Mr and Mrs. Claude Johnson i
spent Sunday in Oklahoma City i PITTSBURGH, Oc
Boundary Walk
Irks Selectman
DAILY LESS
IN ENGLIS
ATHOL, Mass., Oct. 18—(U.R)— j WORDS OFTEN MIS1
A “communique" from the select-;not say’ "Where do yo
„„„ c, , , .. , . Say, "Where do you liv
men of New Salem to the select-
men of Athol has precipitated a
wild scramble of town fathers
anxious to esenne a customary
task that crops up every five
years
"New Salem," read the “com-
munique, “being the older town,
is by custom reemired to notify
j Athol when it is time for the
boundaries of the two towns to
be perambulated."
Perambulation of the boun-
daries requires that the selectmen
of the two towns hike along the
■town lines. Each time they find t as In men, o as in
'a boundary marker, the date is | second syllable). "He
'painted thereon and the hike is stentorian vclce in comn;
resumed up and down hill.
Recalling the legendary and
actual disasters that befell other
j perambulators Chairman Warren
C. Karner of the Athol selectmen
announced on receipt of the “com-
munique” that he would avail
j himself of the prerogative of ap-
pointing a representative. •
Selectmen Philip S. Perley said
j he would follow Karner's lead, but
i Selectman N. Hastings Twichell.
OFTEN MISPRONOU1-
hilist, Pronounce ni-l-list
in night, second i as
stressed, third i as n 1
first syllable. •
OFTEN MISSPELLED
tlon; fal not fall ncr
SYNONYMS: Mentalit;
tuallty. acumen, penetrn!
ness.
WORD STUDY: "Us
three times and it Is y
us Increase our vocabular
tering one word each da
word: STENTORIAN;
loud. 'Pronounce ston-t
Modern Etiqu
By ROBERTA L
Q. When a bride ha
a gift from the office i
sisting of perhaps a hu
ployes, how should she
edge it?
A. Write a personal
thanks to her employe
‘ apparently feeling the need of rhlef clerk, or the p
fresh air and exercise, said he was knows had charge of t
readv to don his hiking outfit. |buttons toward the gi
Most recent oi the perambula- ,his person to thank th
tion disasters occurred 10 years j Q What Is a "frappe.
ago when Charles H. Cooke, now a 'is it pronounced?
state representative. perambulated : A* It Is an iced or fi
the boundary. He had reached the I ture or drink Pronoun
! top of a steep hill and was about first a as in ask, secon
i to paint a marker when his fo^t 1 pay, accent last syllabic
I slipped. Q. Is it correct to say U
Cooke rolled, bounced and som- "There is a man I w.
ersaultad down a 50-foot ravine.
Observers said that salty observa-
tions made by Cooke, who was
more hurt In spirit than In body,
could be heard for miles.
troduce you to?"
A. No. The man is a
Rented to tlie woman. C
say, "There is a man
Introduce to ycu.”
DbU by (I|IU4 r>stv« H.t-I < *'*• *»f
Man In Street j YOUR GOOD HEALTH
Id hxplore Art
Art's "man In the
18- (ll.Ri- j
street” who ;
Acid Stomach Not Always “6ver-Acid”—May Be
Due to Sensitive Membranes
By CLAUD NORTH CHRISM AN, M.D.
with their son, Carl Johnson. Mrs
Johnson and son. Gary Willis. ha* always thought of fine paint-
Dr. and Mrs. W P Lawton Ol muucu at ol mystery , ......
El Reno were Sunday afternoon; wm s(Mm ,iav, hts lining nt car- JUST abouUhe time we are thor- ist If more than one-third of the
U Mr "and' Mrs. Stephen' Sanger ' '“J—rsl-Sir^dlrector of art fr.am oI a baM game’ or an
„, tl!mr S | uueuoi oi '‘' international hookup, an an-
nnd children of Chlckas.ia wne (or thp pqtxburgh public schools, nouncer breaks in to expound the
week-end guests of Mr Sanger s. b.ls announced that he is reoren-
mother. Mrs. S. S. Sanger, and i H1 his art class at the institute !
sister. Miss Leah Sanger. {for people who don't wart to be I
and Mrs Robert Belisle!
Mr «onen wnsie | arlt,ts bul who JUM want to un-
nnd family of Oklahoma City were j derslnnri ivrt ;lll <lbout
ut .-jri/uji n,„,c iun.i w. _ _ _________ ____ ____ Sunday afternoon visitors of Mr. J j endeavoring to tear down
evidence and confessions, and mill- 'lo l|ie work ol 20 men in coinbatt- 1 Bpllsle s Mrs No,n Bp* [ the impression lhat art is n niys-
• • .inllnu1., nimniAnt nnonati tl.. I llSlC. I tau. • .Mrl iltfti Alt# nvisIKIt IaBC fKlN
lug cotton's greatest enemy—the
boll weevil
| terv and that art exhibitions can
____________ Mrs J. L. Bumpers and Mis 1M1| ^ understood by Hie man in
Williams has .spent much of hto Brtty 1 0U Pr'"'k' w,ul I the street," Stephan explained
and down Clifford Barrett of Oklahoma City 'Thore it rothing mysterious about
and Mrs. Floyd Slade of LI Reno | painting. If it Is good. It will
to Los Angeles, Calif, for a 10- j j^,,. ,,naivsis.
day visit with relatives, returned j . j disagree with artists who
to their home Saturday evening, i snrer nt |bP public for not under-
standing their pictures. After all
t&ry training generally.
Slieriffs and other active peace
officers throughout the state have
been invited to attend the classes. | lifetime walking up
but It Is understood that anyone rows of cotton under a blistering
thus participating must pay all of sun with i* "hand mopper.
hi* expenses ,-plashing the protective solution
Tlie closest co-operation Is being icn P1’"”s Bul *n-st •sp®-‘on ■ n, al,d Mrs. F. G Sinclair spent
maintained between the foderal [ hitched a mule to a m.u ) nc aiu j sunduy in Oklahoma City with
bureau of Investigation and the flnlshrd a task a genetn re- tlwlr son and daughter-in-law. Mr
nuKlix cofxlv rlAiwrlmcnt In fart I QtllreS SOVCml Weeks In a lUW day®. If Atilt th Sinclair am
public safety department. In fact, | •“ v' ”'1 j and Mrs. Kenneth Sinclair, and
the federal bureau's G-men in-1 The mechanical mopper is con- . family. xiielr granddaughter. Ruth
structors are dominating most of1 structed with cylinders running m ^nn accompanied them home for
the classroom work. Federal In- opposite directions beneath an n vls(it of several days,
structors are provided lor firearms eight-gallon lank containing a Junior Pribyl and Mike Klutz,
instruction, fingerprint ldentifica- poisonous liquid On each cylinder students p, pic University of Okla-
tlon, technique and means of ar- ( arc 12 mops. 1 homa at Norman, spent the week
real, crime scene search and record- The mops revolve to touch each ,.1Kj with their parents.
they live only because the public
goes to see their shows."
dangers of in-
digestion and
intestine is removed.
The usual symptoms of the pres-
Darrell Kane, uncertain
i whether to marry bulge Addison
j leaves New York to visit her Aunt
I .Midge in Santa Monica. C'alifor-
! nia. Two rears ago. she and
.Vlidse's wealthy stepson Alan
KadrlifTe. were in love. Now hr
ably come up. and she
out off any discussion of
Midge for as long as oo
"THE next morning
» a
ence of too much acid in the stom- i in 1,1 v‘ *vilh Juliette Darcy
ach are heart burn and acid eruc-
tations. Frequently there is a sense
of burning in the pit of the stom-
o f overloading i ach. with a feeling of fulness,
the system belching and pain lasting for an
with acids, and ' hour or two after meals. Pain and
advising some burning between the shoulder
product as a blades is common,
sure cure. The patient is usually well nour-
“Excess acid' ished and of good color. Examina-
in the stom- lion of the stomach contents, may
ach" seems to show that the percentage of add
be t h e slogan is not high. Indeed, it may be very
of too many IiiRli for some of us with no symp-
panaceas. 1 f toms. This indicates that the usual
but Midge is opposed, tor she
hopes eventually to makr a
match between Alan and her
ymin; (laughter. Gloria Benson
>he offers Darrell sl non
to break up the romance. Dar-
rell is disgusted. .Meanwhile.
Gloria, to Midge's annoyance, is
setting her cap fin Alan's less
eligible brother Mike. Darrell,
too. is attracted to Mike, and he
to her. bul Gloria jealously
make* him believe lhat Darrell
is still interested m Alan. A
meaning leas kiss that Alan give*
Darrell Is seen by Juliette and
awakened oy the sun
across her oca She lay fi
warm and relaxed, wat
window curtains oillowi
oreeze It was a lovely di
she tbought she could
ioved to the full if c
weren't so much weigh I
minci
When Elsie, the mail
nei oreaklast tray Dar
-.I-
PR. CHRISM AN
our stomachs
must contain
acid. Certain cells in the stomach
excrete hydrochloric acid; others.
. various digestive ferments which
This will be ihe firth consent- , do not act wej| eXcept in the pres-
tive season for Stephan's Carncgla ence of acid.
we are to di- distress is due more to the sensi- i ”llrrr" '*rn ; .
vest our food, tjveness of themucou* membrane j c“ nVbUtortv accul-s Oa£
sketch class lor adult*, which has , if the lining of the stomach Is
than to the degree of acidity. j ^ ^ ;tfaV Xian bsft
Strange y enough, quite fre- I of „rnll„g him only for hi*
quently all the symptoms of exoes- money, she furiously strikes him
sive gastric acidity are present rhen j,idSP |parns thr rift,
with very low acidity. Indeed, some ' alMj js ,.|atcd
of these are relieved by the ad- j
ministration of hydrochloric acid I CHAPTER XV
and rendered more severe by alka-
‘Is anv one up?"
"Yes miss—Mrs. Hat
gone into town But Mis
still asleeo She usually <
up until late unless tliet
thing special going on "
"I think I II go into to
—to shop." said Darrell
a bus that will take n
wav downtown?"
Elsie looked surprised
oi anv one in this houa
bus was something new
"Yes. miss there's a
why don t vou use Ml:
car?"
Darrell smiled Buses
i nrolcd about 404 art lovers from injured by sucli diseases as perni-
ing of data, description of in- side ol' the cotton stalk, the leaves
dividual*, evidence and confessions.! and the branches,
and Jurisdiction of federal In- williams has demonstrated the
feRtigative agencies machine tc neighboring planters
Walter B Johnson, public safety und applied for a patent Next,
commission.-i says It will be the season he expects to see the boll
policy of ids department to give weevil fought by his machine
patrolmen advanced Instruction at ] throughout the South,
various times He expressed belie! j
that the schools will insure con- JOBS NO HANDICAP
tlnued maintenance of the highest j LAWRENCE. Kan.—(U.R)—Work-
standards of efficiency in the pn- mg students at the University of
tnol Kansas have maintained a slightly
* * * i higher scholastic standing than the
A 12-year-old Healdton bicyclist , average for nil student*, a survey
received a fractured skull and other has revealed.
DOWN MEMORY LANE
Charles Shellenberger. student in
the University ol Oklahoma med-
ical senool at Oklahoma City, .spent |
the week-end with Ills parents.
Mr end Mrs. C. L. Shellenberger
Tlie Yukon htghschool band and
director, P W. Richer!, attended
Central's homecoming at Edmond
Saturday.
Mrs. Ed Warkentln. Mrs. H L
Frv and Mrs F.’ Porta attended
luncheon and executive meeting
of tlie Oklahoma Federation of
Music Clubs in Oklahoma City
Monday.
Mr and Mrs Frank Dobrv and
daughter ot Oklahoma City spam
the week-end with Mrs Dobry's
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Mc-
Klnnev and other relatives.
Mrs. 8 S. Sanger and daughter,
Miss Leah Sanger, were El Reno
visitors Saturday afternoon
the district Included on the cmus anemia or cancer, the stom-
rcster of students arc the supci- ach contains very little or no acid.
Intendent of a steel mill, a lann- The cells of the stomach do not
dress n now and throat specialist, secrete continuously. It Is only
an architect a florist and many ' when stimulated by some outside
public school teachers. influence, such aa iseeing smelling
* ii i i. or tasting attractive foods, do they
In his class. Stephan treats , sUrt tQ •ccrete
composition, design color theory whrn food pntm the „omach,
and Ihi human flat re and dis- ^.^Qn is Increased and regu-
cusses antoinls, birds and flower lated by the type of food and the
pictures and landscapes. He makes resulting necessity for digestive
a drawing before the class and enzymes. The stomnch only starts
then asks the students to make digestion. The lurge part Is accom-
drawings, “to show the public I P»*hed »y more powerful enzymes
lis.
DARRELL went on to her ^Ym^Walkin^aTe-
If the over-acidity Is due to ulcer ] ‘ " room, she had a feeling of take one didn't bother
of the stomach, step* to cure the i oeing trapped — trapiied by
i * chi Miss Olorla might nt
Midge. Quite unwittingly, she DPfore j get j may
nad done the very thing her most of the day. How I
aunt had wanted her to do— the bus?"
caused a break between Alan ‘Three block* miss."
and Juliette Simply by coming ^Dorrdlwwt into to-
here, she had started a chain vague notion that she m
of events that had led to dis- get in touch with Ju
as(Pr \ once there, she changed
It was she decided tc
ulcer should be taken. When chron-
ic inflammation is the cause of the
acidity, this cause must be treated
and not just the acidity. Frequent
occasions for this are the excessive
use of alcohol, tobacco, irritating
foods, such as pepper, catsups, and
chill; highly acid foods or spoiled
foods, which may cause Irritation
lasting for a number of weeks.
There are faulty habit* of eat-
ing. such as are forped upon travel-
ing and professional men who eat
hastily at irregular intervals; or
in the intestines. One con live (meals composed of sandwiches,
without a stomach, but cannot ex- and raw salads hastily eaten.
"tltiite of Technology
Oct. IS. 1«»2»
El Reno highschool Indians won a decisive victory over
Shawnee highschool gridsters in the opening game of the _\rjZ()na Prison Starts
Central conference Friday afternoon at Legion nark by the Work-For-All Program
score of 21-fl. In winnin,r Mi<■ till El Reno lost one ol its
mo«t valuable nlaver* Marion Hiffhv. quarterhaek. who
suffered a broken eollnrlione. ThU is the third Fl Reno
nlnvcr to suffer «lmll"r iniurv thi* -ononn. llneh Willuur-
h»m wn« jniored in Ihe game with Chicknohn IhoI Friday,
while Glenn Rishop was iniured ihe previous week.
Ptxhsrd c Nelonn iodn” from W^htta. Eqn
pnd Mr mid Afro. Arch TivW of Oklahoma Citv will ar-
rive tht* overlnw to ho wooh-end «neoto nt ihe Lome of
M1’ and Mrs Er^nk Ta'dor Mr*- Wohor has been th>o <mest
of her parents. Mr. and Mrs. Tnvlor. for several days.
Aftrta «3„rn Ellon Towpuond who stlonds Ihe TTnlvero**”
of Okluhomn >n Nnrm«n. I" snondlmr 1V>P week-end with
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. 1H Townsend.
Miss Velma CUhnri. who is e**end!«<r Okp>homo ColWe
fnr Women, Chickasha, is spending the week-end in ho*
home
FLORENCE. Arlz Oct. l8-(UJt)
—Convict* of tlie Arizona xtate
prison, where nearly 40 Inmates
escaped last year; arc being kept
busy now under a "baby WPA"
inaugurated by Warden Gene
Shute.
Shute said he was instituting a j
work-for-all program of "pick and
shovel and wheal borrow pushing"
for ihe convicts "so they won't
think they're in a rest home."
"We are putting every one of
tlie men to work," the warden
said "We are going to develop
what Is behind the creation of a
picture." |
Only expenae to the student to , , , .
purchase ot imperials Th«- Protossor Spends Years Montreal .lob Hunters
class is sponsored bv the depart- ]n Translating Diodorus Get Special Training
mi nt of fine arts at OarncRte In
LINCOLN, Neb, Oct 1B--(UP- MONTRKAI Oet. l»-<U.R>-Mon-
8lncc lt-30. Dr C H Oldfather treat business men are moving to
It -----—---— tt I dean of the University of Nebras- assure themselves of better trnln-
Mountain View I ka college of prls and sctencps ed employes In the future.
9----- —--n ( has spent this t.|)nrp timp trails- Standardization of pre-eniploy-
Mfc Mattie Hill who is at- ] lating the preserved writing* of the ment training, enabling personnel
tending Central Stale college at > ^nclenl Orcek historian. Diodorus, managers to select staff replace-
Edinond. spent the week-end with | who lh-ed about 70 B C the H ments without difficulty, accurate-
iier parents Mi and Mrs R O. o Wells of his time ly, is the objective of a committee
1 Smith I Selected by the Loeb classic*' spl up by the Montreal chapter of
Mr and Mrs, Mac Smith nnd|Hbrnrv of I/Uldon. can Oldfnther Rw National Olflce Management
family spent several day* last week I now has completed the third vol- association
In the homes of Mr. and Mrs, | nine of the scries ol 12. Tims far
Jake Zweiachcr and Mr. and Mrs. the task has required the trnnsla-
R. G. Smith They departed Sat- tion of more tlinn t7n,000 Greek
urday for New Mexico, where they | words. Tlie last translation of
will -estdc | Diodorus was in 1616, Historians
She should have called off her
attempt to talk to Juli
visit as soon as she learned what Bpttpl „ w.hlle
Mtdge was up to. But It was too Then'°t constoer
late to regret that now The qurs- A|an w talk th)nRS oVe,
tlon was. what to do next
but realized that absolt
Look and l/osirn
1 What three presidents of the
Mr. and Mi*. Isaac. long and | want to learn what people In Dio- United State* died natural denths
dorus' time knew shout
fnmlh wen Sunday visitors of
Mr and Mrs H Blevins and fnm- j Britain anti the Gauls.
Of '
Ml and Mrs. Art Holllngshead j
und son were Sunday dinner guest*
of Mr and Mrs Will Herrtman
and daughter. Elsie.
Mr and Mrs. Floy Schwab and!
HOW CAN I?
Ily ANN ASHLEY
early while In office?
2. Which state leads in the pro-
duction of rice?
3. Wind 1* the most rarnors diary
in English literature?
4 What Is obstetrics?
5 What does the word "kith"
in the expression "kith and kin”
muscles in them. They are going j ron were Sunday visitors of Mr. I Q- HOW ran I prevent burning I mean?
to dig ditches, haul dirt In the and Mrs. Fred Schwab and grand- when there Is not sufficient batter ANSWKKK
wheelbarrows, not truck*, so they daughter. , j to fill nil the pans, when making j william Henry Harrison. Zach-
wlll feel like going to bed at night I Mr. and Mrs Tom Householder muffins? ? .iry Taylor and Warren O. Hard-
and sleep Instead of thinking up I visited Sunday afternoon with Mr. i A Fill the empty pans with \va- in*.
and Mrs lots Lockeudorfer and (ter. This will not only prevent
burning, but tlie muffins will bake
Me nnd Mm Wnltee GaffinLeD nnd dnn«»h1er, Nnlnli"
moforod tn Oklahoma Gltv nnd «nont Ihe dftV.
TTI Deno h;"-hschool -senailc «<-eee A»reqte'1 hv the
Plfv hfe'Lnchool fonm »i TTfflon riiv Feldev nfteenOOV) hv
eeoro o* ff?-11 ei Reno slaved n hard frnmo hut 1h(-
"hronks” favored Union Citv.
Mr. owl Mrs Rov R. Walker returned from Ohio nfter
v{oitin<r Afr and Mrs Edward Lnmpheir nnd other relatives.
I
Ideas of getting away "
■ ■ ■ ■■ I family
Hits Red Innor Tiiho I J c Martin, of near Kingfisher, j more evenly.
' . ] sm-nt Wednesday night and Tliurs-1 Q How can I set colors in cotton
Serve *As AnK lcwontlS | dav |n the home of his aon-ln-1 goods before wa hlng the first
and daughter, Mr nnd Mrs. O jtlmc??
R Perkins.
WATBRTOWN, WIs, Oct 18
(U.R)—Old razor blades arc still a
problem, but fishermen here have
found a use for an equally Imllx-
posnhlc object, old Inner tubes.
Hugo Brlcsemdster originated
the Idea of using bit* of red Inner
tube a* synthetic angle worms.
3. Louisiana
3 'Dint of Samuel Pepys (1633-
1703).
4 Science of midwifery.
5. Familiar friend*, neighbors, or
fellow countrymen, collectively.
A. Souk the good* t(>> 20 minute*
Mr. nnd Mrs. Harold Dcwnlt and j in cold water t which a handful | SCHOOL TACKLE WEIGHTS 285
Conrad Fox visited nt Pryor Frt» of salt has been added, RIVERTON. Kan.—(U.8) — Tlie
dnv Mrs, De wait's grandmother, j Q How can I prepare a good htghschool football team here boasts
who is 82 years of age. returned | skin whitencr? of mi* oi Uw biggust player* In
A. An application ol cqi ;i| parts
of rose water and lemon juice acts
n» a skin whltoner,
with them to make her horn#
with her daughter, Mrs. Iz-e Gra-
ham, Mr Orahani and family
the country. He Is Earl Crane, a
16-yenr-olU tackle wlio weighs 285
pounds
She clianged from her riding ing C0U|d accomplish
clothes to a sun-back dress ana jn fact sliouid b(
went down to the beach. The wind. him by ,omr o{ jllltpft
whipping against her face cleared jt Would be fatal,
her thought*. siie spent the mornim
She debated whether or not she ti&d ^ leisure]v lunch. tl‘
should return to New York imme- a moVie xTms it was
Jiatcly. It seemed, at first, the best afternoon by the time s
hlnR to do—if she removed herself home
from the scene the trouble would
blow over. But would it? Would *N HER room shc fou
net mere departure bring Juliette 1 from MarRol on h(
back to Alan? She feared not tablp 8ho lorp u oppr
There was Midge for instance halfway through It befo
She would undoubtedly use every V/Mi „ waslVt tPlhnR ,
device In her power lo aggravate thlnRS shP wantPd ,
and widen the break.
mm,.™ ... We’re terribly buv
THE responsibility for the un- fa /f-, s0 coM>
1 happy situation weighed heavllv freezing. Can t net cnot
on Darrell. She felt she couldn't my apartment. and hav
leave without making every poe- couple of sweaters and
stole effort to right things. Her ot- to keep warm. Whe
tempt to talk to Juliette had failed hang nut the banners /
miserably, but still, she felt Itn- turn?...
oelled to try aRain.
Yes. she would stay, she decided Not a word about Rlc
stay until she was sure that thr evening shc had spent 1
misunderstanding would be cleared As Darrell put the
•to into it* envelope. Elsl
Meanwhile, there were Midge with a long white florl
and Olorla and Mike to contend "Till* came for you s
with. What Midge's next move miss. We put it in thi
would be was wholly unpredictable, tor."
As for Oloria. she was u* danger- Darrell's heart miss
ous as her mother. Queer what Was it from Ridge or—i
lealousy would do to the undlsclp- apologizing to her? Q
lined. Darrell thought. opened the box found
But the person uppermost in her roses and picked tip tl
mind was Mike Hot resentment it was written:
toward him still burned within her.
She tried desperately to shut him From oar gold digger
out of her ronsclousneas—but could
not. Dnrrell flushed. Fro
She lunched alone that day. course. He dug gold on
Midge still nursing her headache, tains In Australia. . , .
stayed in her room, and Olorla Oblivious of Elsie wi
had gone of? somewhere. At din- site angrily lore the ca
nertlme. Darrell pleaded a head- She picked up the I
ache and had a tray sent up. (or handed them to the in
there were guests and she was tn "Take them away."
no tnood to make light conversa- don't want them in
tlon, Then, seeing Elsie's t
Thus, she passed the day with- presslon. she added qu'
out having to see and talk to give me hay fever."
Midge, except for one or two brief -
glimpses. She didn't want to see (To be continu
her. for she knew that the subject (The characters tn th\
of Alan and Juliette would lnevit- fcttttous)
I
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Dyer, Ray J. The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 48, No. 201, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 18, 1939, newspaper, October 18, 1939; El Reno, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc920838/m1/4/: accessed April 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.