The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 50, No. 146, Ed. 1 Monday, August 18, 1941 Page: 4 of 6
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EL RENO (OELA.) DAILY TRIBUNE
The El Reno Daily Tribune
A Blue
Newspaper Serving a Blue Ribbon Community
Issued dally except Saturday from 207 South Rock Island avenue,
iBd entered as second-class mail matter under the act of March 3, 1879.
BUDGE HARLE
Neris Editor
RAY J. DYER
Editor and Publisher
DEAN WARD
Advertising Manager
The ASSOCIATED PRESS is exclusively entitled to the use of re-
plication of all the news dispatches credited to it or not credited by
t paper, and also to all the local news therein.
All rights of publication of special dispatches herein also are reserved.
Mrs. Karl Mannschreck Is
Hostess To Croup
MEMBER
SOUTHERN NEWSPAPER
PUBLISHERS ASS N.
<m
MEMBER
OKLAHOMA PRESS
ASSOCIATION
DAILY SUBSCRIPTION RATES BY MAIL IN CANADIAN AND
BY CARRIER ADJOINING COUNTIES
Dns Week-------------$ .15 Three Months_____________$1.00
rhree Months------------$1.75 Six Months______________$3 00
Ctoe Tear--------------$7.00 One Year______________$5.00
Including Sales Tax
MONDAY. AUGUST 18, 1041
THE QUESTION IS WHEN WILL YOU KNOCK AND BE AD-
MITTED? The kingdom of God romelh not with observation; neither
•hall they say lo here or lo there! for behold the kingdom of God Is
Within you.—Luke 17: ?0 and 21.
The Voice of Highway Safety
Notes from Oklahoma Patrolmen’s
Big Brown Books
alleged
traffic.
/"YKkAHOMA CITY, Aug 18.—
'Special 1—Interviewing Gordon
H. Sheehe is a little like having
Oscar of the Waldorf out to your
house for dinner. You wisli you
knew more 01 his recipes.
Sheehe is acting director of the
Northwestern university traffic in-
stitute, Evanston, 111. In the last
week he has conducted Interviews
in more than 30 cities. He lias
talked to nearly 100 police and
traffic officers, appraising their
personalities, sizing 114) their quali-
fications. pulling out their points
of view. When he finishes Ills
“route" in about two weeks lie will
recommend 13 of the interviewees
for |$1,200 scholarships to the in-
stitute.
Tile fast-traveling question-imd-
answer man was In Oklahoma City
Saturday and Sunday to Interview
Lieutenant J. W. Neuffer of the
police traffic bureau, one of the
scholarship candidates.
The former Vermont highway
patrolman spends nine months oi
tile year in an atmosphere ol
speed-suppression and traffic con-
trol, but once he's outside of Evans- °*
vllle he's just John Q Citizen, and
he's scared to death of heavy traf-
fic. And everybody who chaufter'.
him tries to show what a good
driver he is—at high speed.
"Every time I arrive at an air
port I'm behind schedule, K
seems," he recounted "They have
to whiz me to town like a meteor
law violation In
BY TRIBUNE CORRESPONDENT
UNION CITY. Aug. 18 — Mrs.
Karl Mannschreck was a delight-
ful hostess at the meeting of the
Woman’s Society of Christian Ser-
vice at the Methodist church
Thursday afternoon.
In the business session, plans
were completed to serve a jitney
supper at the church Tuesday eve-
ning, Aug. 19.
Delicious iced refreshments were
served.
Members present were Mrs, Jake
Bocvers. Mrs. Ann Gardner, Mrs,
Ben Vogel, Mrs. Alice Stephens,
Mrs. V. W. Stephens, Mrs. Mike
Boevers, Mrs. Eva Needham. Mrs.
Mollie Nutt Mrs. William O'Dan-
iels, Mrs. E. H. Ninman. Mrs. R.
A. Patzack, Mrs. Edith Franklin,
Miss Jean Woods, Miss Ethel
Davis. Mrs. Joe Ross, Mrs. George
Schalfer, Mrs. Ann McMahan, Mrs.
Ed Morrison, Mrs. Mary Noble,
Mrs. H. E. Noble, Mrs. R. P.
Roselle, Mrs. James White and
moving • Mrs Kenton Petree.
Guests for the afternoon were
SENDING FORTH A DOVE—WITH ESCORT
MONDAY, AUGI
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While the patrol hopes it will not Mrs. John Kelly, Mrs. Henry Al-
be necessary to make 5,000 more
arrests in 1941, it is determined to
enforce the laws on the highways.
Hence the genial admonition about
the mythical "Second 3,000 club"
by the commissioner.
Thousands of Oklahomans still
have their vacations to anticipate,
and few things short of a serlrus
auto smashup can spoil a vacation
as quickly as a traffic law viola-
tion serious enough to compel the
patrol to arrest the vacationist.
Commissioner Johnson pointed
out tliat while the patrol was (mak-
ing 5,601 nrrests for alleged viola- i
%
cH0lilLL
\jp ■
• STORIES
IN stam;
Program To Put 750,000
In New Homes
SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 18.—(U.R)
-The United States is experienr- j VA/nr rjotam,;,
ing the greatest migration of fain- ’ ™
flies to new homes since covered rfench We
wagon days, according to Nathan I ^NE f K..ancfi.s
Stmor8' “S aUthC’rit'V ad* ! 0 sessions fs Fre
mimstrator. and untj, Wor[d w
The difference between the two; it will remain a
migrations, he explained, is that! pawn. Eight col
today families are moving into new
houses completed to die last mouse
trap.
this territory—Ser
Guinea, the Ivory i
French Sudan, M;
and Circonscriptio
Dependencies.
Dakar and it;
were formerly a
but were made a :
in December, 191
above, issued by tl
bers, Miss Vitalis Dries, Mrs. Em-
ma Sweeney, Mrs. Maurice Muzzy
and daughter, Slilrleen Fuhring, of
El Reno, Mrs. Haley Sweeney, Mrs.
Will Wieman, Mrs Will Feddersen.
Mrs. Richard Feddersen and Mrs j
Robert Woods.
Mrs. Ann McMahan conducted j
the devotlonaU, Slilrleen Fuhring J
sang a solo, and Mrs. Mae Ste-
phens read a report on the book,
"My Sister and I."
"Secret ssiters" were revealed
with a lot of surprises and fun.
At
On a flying trip to Pacific coosi
cities to see what slum districts
should be eliminated and why they
were not being rebuilt faster than
they are, Straus declared his de-
partment plans to rehouse 193,000
families or a total of 753.000 poo- 1 ernment in 1935, s
,ple in 444 localities in 39 states I herbe BndSe in D
and territories.
Small Cities Predominant
Three quarters of these projects,
he said, are in cities of fewer than
50,000 population. " * .---------------— -
“At this moment," he declared.1 i,lso Produced >n :
"there is a shortage of 13 000,000 anb a salt industi
decent dwellings in the United Ive^* a milita
fatates. We hope to be able to pro- J Senegal and esp
duce some 200,000 fit hemes tills Dakar, have great
)’ear- ; The Senegal river
“Necessarily, some of these will1 eign ships and Dak
have to be near defense projects entry. The Unite
and this is going to create a new many, England,
problem for the future, but which c°urse, France art
Senegal is fypict
French West Afric;
would like to con
the soil is generall;
cultivate ground-
maize and some r
kar. It is only
we are already studying anci pre- , _
pring for. However, I am less eon- lrom und v'
cerned about these ghost towns of un exce en invasl
Vft
I
BEHIND THE SCENES
IN WASHINGTON
The next meeting in two weeks
tions in moving traffic, it was ex-! will be with Mrs Mary Noble and
tending aid to 38,918 motorists In I Mrs. H. E'. Noble as hostesses.
distress and Issuing warnings to | Miss Mahotah Blackertoy of Dun- . . ,
more than 92.ooo. tan'was the week-end guest of 1 One Man Lobor Department Pacifies Hawaiian
F0"“U“ Wal'*" Lobor Troubl« bV APP"c°«°n of Horse Sense
airesiect maae tne situation tough Rev Bertrand Easterday, O. S.
for themselves,' said Mr Johnson. B of E, Rf,no nnd Ji)clc Mur.
dJld.',n^t ™VboAy.' Phy of Calumet were guests Mon-
day of Rev. Sullivan.
Tuskegee Sends
Fliers To Army
except where duty plainly dictated
BY PETEIt EDSON
NEA Service Washington Correspondent
this course."
The nverage patrolman since the Miss Nln“ Voltflu was tbe wt‘*‘k- j WASHINGTON.—'The whole U. S. Department of Labor for the ln« Pohool held at the Institute is
• »n,i „r uu. ” Territory of Hawaii came to Washington on leave the other day, ----J --------
TUSKEGEE. Ala.. Aug. 18.—(U.R)
—The army.s first flying school for
negroes, located at Tuskegee Insti-
tute, is turning out pilots now for
the nation's flying forces.
A class of 10 graduates of the
Civil Aeronautics authority train-1
the future when they will be de-
serted by the men no longer need-
ed in the defense industry than I
am about the ghost town of today.
“It isn’t poetry when a man who
has been without employment 'or
years suddenly gets a job in a de-
fense industry and shows up with
joy to work only to tied himself
wandering from door to door beg-
ging for a place to sleap between
working hours.
Fast Work Is Keynote
“These towns constitute one of
our big problems but we are pro-
viding for housing as ’•ap'dly ns
possible even if the towns ad;acent
South America.
Exotic Orient
Grow In C<
SPRINGFIELD, :
—Dr. J. R. Lieb
lias proved that e>
grow in the mid<
belt.
During the past
has learned to cu
and Chinese lotusi
double flowers, wl
are the only bloon
in the nation outsi
to defense projects become ghost
trvnme t Un fiitm-n "
v i ah' ijyiiu iiiiiiiiii onivi pill]
this year has issued 17,p,Kl *wsl of Mlss KaU‘ Boevers-
warnings in borderline itrafflol Mr and Mrs- Loule Vogel and
cases for each arrest he has made j daughters of Amarillo. Tex, are
Even in the face of the forego- j visiting Mr, and Mrs. L. Vogel
ing figures, the patrol has gradu- ond other relatives here.
ally stepped up enforcement work
in the last few weeks. It is deter-
Lurille Bollinger, Vivian
Helen Boevers, Agnes and
Hyer,
Cor-
mined to reduce recklessness, espe- nelln Lagali, accompanied by their
dally since 297 lives have been lo t
thus far on state highways in 1941,
sponsor. Miss Irma Pittman, de-
parted Tuesday morning to attend
or a non-stop flight. In Denver. n "dei,th deficit" of 18 lives. J live three-day F H O. camp at
I couldn't stand it any loin
Just told Uie cab driver I had u
long trip ahead qf me and wanted
to finish R. He saw my point and
turned out to be a pretty swell
guy. Tire nearest my heart has
ever come to jumping out of my
mouth whs at Atlanta, Ga What
a ride to town! Bui the taxi
driver who orouglit me into Okla-
homa City was really a good driver,
nnd 1 didn't mind the ride a bit.
'Traffic safety is becoming mom
and more a specialist's work. Shee-
he said, and that's where he thtnki
the Northwestern school and other
traffic courses help commun
all over the country.
compared
Inst year
(with the same
period j Platt
DAILY LESSON
IN ENGLISH
national park
Tiie group ate lunch the first
daj In the i»rk at Norman. After
driving to Turner falls, the re-
mainder of the afternoon was
spent exploring the falls and climb-
ing the 268 steps to the lookout
point. In the evening the group ar-
rived at Platt park at Sulphur,
stopping at Cold Springs camp.
The girls enjoyed exploring the
trails and hunting wood for the
WORDS OFTEN MISUSED Do
not say, "There weren't but three
people present." Say, “There were
but three people present." Were
not but" forms a double negative.
now is the time for all good men i campfire, over which they cooked
OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: jail but one meal
Hauteur Pronounce ho-tur. o as | After breakfast Wednesday mom-
In obey, u as in fur, accent last; i»B the girls rented
i syllable.
• Wh»n ....... „ „ I OFTEN MISSPELLED: Creton- Tile
wnen we train a policeman nt ___ u .. i
„ j__ . * I tie; observe the nne. ’ nhur ■»
the institute, we dont expect him OVu™v.i1.. „ „ „ „ _ i ,JI'ur
to be, pigeon-holed when he goes! ®YNONYMS R‘P»V. coinpen- Wednesday night the gtrls dis-
bodk home we expect him to „J *U*sed plans for a bigger and bet-
put to use what he has learned . ' ‘ PY 1 B „w“rd ler p H ° organization In 1941-
to inject it into his department to ! «■
After an early lunch Thursday I
but before you conjure up any mental image of a boatload of bureau-
crats on a junket, please be udvised that the department in Hawaii
consists of Mr. Howard Durham—which is a pleas-
ing variation from the usual pattern of a govern-
ment office holding anywhere from a couple of
dozen to a couple of hundred. •
Durham, a young lawyer of 35, went to Honolulu
from San Francisco a few years ago as an inspector
for the wages and hours division of the depart-
ment. but when he got there the department started
shooting other problems at him. Before he knew
it, he was representing not only the wages and
hours division, the child labor division, and the
conciliation service, but he was also administering
the Walsh-Healy act covering construction projects
for Army and Navy expansion, and starting an
apprentice training program for defense industries.
The interesting thing about Mr. Durham is he
seems to have won the confidence of both the em-
ployers and employes of the island’s industries,
and in a manner which shews what can oe done in administering
tlirse new labor laws, in seeing that everybody gets a square deal.
Even Samuel Wilder King, the Republican dclogute from Hawaii
to Congress since 1935, admits that Durham’s management of these
controversial matters has been well done.
Edson
J^ING points out that while the general impression has been that
the big estates in Hawaii have been exploiters of labor, the
bicycles and I opposite has been true because the constant shortage of labor on the
teach it to others.''
On the practical side lor (lie av-
erage motorist, Slier lie has a word
of advice on avoiding traffic tick-
et*. In brief, his word of counsel
la:
"Walk I"
♦ * *
Don't become a member of the
"Second 5,000 club" in Oklahoma
it was urged cheerfully today bv
Walter B Johnson, state comruls-
sioner of public safety
By way o! clarifying this mes-
sage, Commissioner Johnson ex-
plained that 5.601 persons have
been arrested by the Oklahoma
MISSPELLED
observe the nne.
8YNONYMS: Repay, roinpen-!
sntr. remunerate, reimburse
WORD STUDY: "Use a word)
three times and it is yours." D>t j
us increase our vocabulary by mas-
tering one word each day. Today's
word: REFTfLGENT; radiant; re-
splendent. "From brightening fields
ether fair disclosed, child of the i
sun. refulgent summer comes."—
Thomson
spent an hour riding in the park, islands lias necessitated the importation of labor from the mainland.
afternoon was spent in Sul-
training and, upon completion of
a five-week course, will be trans-
ferred to the 99th air corps squad-
ron base now undaer construction
near here. *
A contingent of 278 negro enlist
td men will be brought to the bare
from Chanute Field. Ill , to serve
as ground personel. The base will
be one of 42 operating under the
southeast air corps training cen-
ter. which has headquarters at
Montgomery, Ala.
At the dedication of the school
Major General Walter R. Weaver
commanding officer of the training
center, told cadets that "the eyes
of your country and the eyes of
your people are upon you. The
success of the venture depends
upon you."
In addition to the flight training
the Tuskegee institute has Initiat-
ed a program of training for air-
craft Jmeehatiics.
Tuskegee institute has been the
site of a C P. T. training school
since inauguration of the nation-
wide program in 1939. The school,
aided by the Rosenwald fund, has
spent $50,000 on equipment and
^t^ admlttaTuiat the rise ta|gSn?lnB“
cost of building materials caused
mount air
• LOCAL B
Miss Betty Jo Cl
drive, spent the we
bow camp in Okla
by the national defense emergency
has set back low cost rent projects,
but declared the program will be
pushed relentlessly.
Priority for building material
will be asked only in cases when
there is acute shortage of houses
for defense workers.
One project under consideration
for not slowing up the program
during the national defense emer-
gency, is to redesign building proj-
ects to substitute frame for struc-
tural steel.
Every effort is being made to
prevent any increase in rento of Mrs. Edna Wewe
the various projects. Straus re- (er. Beverly Ann, 9
ported. avenue, returned
He found the\jew slum districts a week's visit In K
of San Francisco no better or | with Mrs. Wewerl
worse than those of other cities. John W. Knox.
lilies.
Miss Anna Blgge
City is visiting in i
and Mrs. C. W
Concho.
MOVIE STAR
the girls returned to Turner falls
to spend part of the afternoon1
before continuing the trip home
That has made it necessary to pay bonuses in many cases, and has
meant importation of labor organizers who have done what labor
organizer* usually do, even airmng the polyglot population of Ha-
wniians, Japanese, Chinese. Filipinos, Portuguese, and mninlanders building facilities, and has eight
| planes and a staff of six instruc-
^ M‘ I I ING back to Mr. Durham, his method of handling these situa-
tions was to go quietly to the employers and explain the laws,
then help set up working conditions that Drought operations within
tlie scope of the labor statutes as to minimum wages, overtime pro-
visions ond hours. More than 3000 individuals got nearly $160,000
in extra pay, but the publicity nn the awards and settlement of the
cases was kept
tors, four ground school Instructors
and two mechanics, as well ns
helpers and clerical workers.
ON PACIFIC 49 YEARS
SEATTLE. Wash.—(U.R)—Crlato or
no crisis in the far east, William
Henry Oates, dean of trans-Paclflc
ship officers, is still going strong ]
with 49 years to his credit already. ]
Gates, who lias made more than 200
crossings of the Pacific, sailed as
chief engineer of the American
Lejjal Publication
patrol so far this year for some Mall Line freighter Caplllo,
at a minimum. Nobody hud any chances to crow
u'bout great victories or defeats.
Longshoremen's and stevedores' disputes gave most trouble and
the biggest feather in the Durham Hawaiian cap was the working
out, with a Maritime Labor Board mediator, of what is now referred
' I by Delegate King as a model stevedore labor contract for the
'Publlshixl In The El Reno Daily 1 ‘jSl*e ^ 1 °°*tP Terminals, Ltd., one of the biggest factors in Hawaiian
Tribune. El Reno. Oklahoma. Aug industry.
Under the term* of this contract, for the first time under the
American fiag, if not for the first time in the world, stevedores are
given a guaranteed 40 hours of work a week, year in and year out,
whether work ts available or not. The way this worked out, Honolulu
stevedores received a guaranteed average wage of $2140 a year In
1940, and all uncertainty as to employment wa* ended.
Pigeons Ready
For Army Use
DOWN MEMORY LANE
mii
A ur. 18,
Miss Inna South was hostess yesterday to the Elite
club. The atteruoou was spent with names and music and
refreshments.
A surprise birthday party was Riven yesterday by
employes of the Kelso department store in honor of Miss
•Lena Mohr.
Miss Maud Phelps of Bronson, Tex., arrived last ninht
for an extended visit with her brothers, .James I, ami
Joseph T. Phelps.
18. 194li
NOTICE
TO OWNERS AND OCCU-
PANTS OF THE HEREINAFTER
REAL PROPERTY IN THE CITY
OF EL RENO. OKLAHOMA:
You are hereby notified that the
Ordinances of the City of El
Reno, Oklahoma, provide that nil
lots and premises must be kept
free from hII noxious weeds and
grasses, nnd that if the owner or
occupant fall to cut such weed*
and grasses the City may cause
same to be cut and the ca t there-
of charged against the property
and collected ns taxes.
You are further notified that If
tiie owner or occupant fall to cut
such weeds nnd grasses on or be-
fore the 28th day of August, 1941.
on the following described lots
situated in the City of El Reno.
Canadian County, Oklahoma, fo-
wl! :
Block |,ot*
155—1 to 9
• LOOK AND LEARN • PROBLEM A DAY
NEW ORLEANS. Aug. 18.—<U.R>~-
| Thirty Orleanians have a hobby
I which In the event of war would
( be turned into a grim business—
i the training of homing pigeons.
Their grooming, which has been
going on for years, might end in
acquisition of the birds by the
anny signal corps and tl.elr use In
war communications in which ser-
vice other pigeons, like the fa-
mous Cher Ami, have performed
so heroically in past wars.
Aur. 18. 1931
The year 1931 him proved u record breaker in manv
renpecls and IIurIi Hollund, pioneer farmer near Concho,
aaaured bin friends today that it was u banner season for
'his watermelon crop. Mr. Holland brought in n loud of 12
melons this morninR uveriiRinR more than (Jfi pounds each
The largest melon weighed 78 iMiunds,
Dlv
Garden seeds were studied in view nf fall gardens by
the girls of the Pleasant Hill 4-H club when they met Mon-
day in the home of Miss Bernice Feddersen. Mias Harvey
Thompson directed the study.
Mrs. Arthur Lnmbert. daughter, Geraldine, and son
Jack, spent Monday in Cordell with Rev. and Mrs. R. C
Taylor. They were accomimined there by Charles Taylor
who had been visiting here for the past few days.
152-15-16
48 K'v 9-10-11
•64 19-20-21-22
49 8-0
82 14-15
72-17-18
7— 32-33
10-38-39
8 20-21-22-23-24
10 20-21-W'*22
24 16-17
18-4-5-6
12- 26-26 .
5 9 Clouse Sub
8— 15 to 21
B-Bcg 33 ft. N of 8
lot 8. See 8-12-7. W.
250 ft , E 150 rt, «L
Bee Umilaltcd PU. Sec 8-12-7
The Cltv of El Reno will cause
such weeds and grasses to be cut
ond the cost thereof, plus 25 per-
cent for *u|>erv!<loi\. shall be
charged against said property and
collected ns Taxes
Dated this the 18th day of
August 1041
John Oliver Hall,
City Manager.
Addition
Original
Original
Original
Original
Original
Original
Original
Fair
Fair
tokeuerk
Keith
Keith
bakevlow
Lakevtew
Morr. 2nd
Jensen
E. Cor. of
150 ft., N.
350 ft. to
1 What three Americans hav$
won the Nobel prize for literature?
2. What race horse holds the
world's all-time record as a money
winner?
3. Whnt Is the name of the
southern lights, similar to the
auroi'H borealis ol Uie north?
4 What steamship established
record time for crossing the Atlan-
tic ocean?
5, Wlmt states border on the
Oulf ol Mexico?
ANSWERS
b Sinclair towls, Eugene O’Neill
and Pearl 8 Buck.
2. Senblsrult.
3. Aurora Australia
4 The Queen Mary; 3 days. 20
hour*, nnd 42 minutes.
5 Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi,
Alabama nnd Florldn
gives H p Robbert. president ot the
club, said the birds have been fly-
ing 111 regularly scheduled rii'T.s,
equally If Tom takes $24 nnd | gone of them hundreds of mile.-
Tom
them some
and Bill's father
money to be divided I
12 V: of whnt remains, how much
does (heir father give them al-
together?
ANSWER
$56 Explanation -Subtract 1-8
(the equivalent of 12'iirtt from 14:
multiply 24 by 0,12 S; subtract
from 24; divide 21 by 3-8.
• BARBS
IT'g ONLY ONE
NORMAN— 'Special) —Printed
the same year the American eon.
stltutlon wws adopted, a liandwrlt-
ten book, "School for Scandal," l|
owned by the University of Okla*
liana library and is Uve only on*
in Uve world, It was written on
iinnd-mndn rag paper In 1787 The
scroll Mill is in good condition
WITH the dder season np-
’’ preaching, it might be well to
warn you not to take it too hard.
• • •
Have you discotwtrf ytt that
vacation travel broadens and
flattrni \mu at th* tam« l(m«V
9 0 0
It shouldn't ba so hard to keep
cool In Washington with all thosa
frozen foreign funds lying around,
0 0 0
’A small fown is a place uihrrt
there is no munitions loctory,
■ tt fBI tidlibt that WWfffTl Iffb
Weai
ring f8wer elothsif Just taka
mmmw
a look at tha flfura
In one race from Birmingham,
Ala., to New Orleans imorc khan
500 miles), almost all of the birds
returned safely.
One of Robbert's birds is a dr-
rcendant of Little Hope, which
curried 180 messages in the World
■war.
Carl Weiss, who owns birds of
the French strain known as Scions,
has a father and son lean which
won first place In the Natchitoches
futurity race of 218 alrliiv miles
twice in succession, the father one
year nnd tiie son the next In a
futurity race the birds are entered
before they are out of the shell
Another breeder, Louis L'uiaus. j
Jr., once lost 82 pigeons in one j
race, but ouch a toil is unusual,
particularly for his birds of the
tough Hnnannne strain, a Belgian 1
breed noted for ability to with-
stand bad weather
One of Laasus'i birds once re-
turned home loaded with buckshot
and then dropped dead Another
returned home with a leg shot off
and a third reached home almost
frooen.
HORIZONTAL
1 One who
ensnares
8 Hint.
J5 Revoked
17 One who
tosses
18 Winglike
19 Suffix (pi.)
21 Watered silk
22 Girl’s name
24 Part of a stove
26 Rubber
27 Deep hole
28 Right (abbr.).
30 Statue.
32 Near
33 Editor (abbr.)
34 Scoffing
36 Consumed
37 Time period
38 Ran swiftly.
39 Italians
40 Mineral (pi.)
42 Comedian.
43 Avoids.
45 Humorist
46 Orders.
48 Mother.
43 Instead
(simplified).
50 Upon (prefix)
51 Damage
52 Departure
54 A peculiarity
_____
I 7 \S pb
Answer to Previous Puzzle
Wki<
C.P.AjVjE
w u]m i d
RpC
slHafg
ilis
a&ip
TjBp E
IllBER
I N I
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T A R Eff
Siy;n dii 'C
57 Afternoon
parties.
59 Host.
60 Upon.
62 Filtcrer
64 Article of
furniture.
85 Cements.
VERTICAL
1 Wandered.
2 Put down
again.
3 Severed.
4 Persian fairy
5 State (abbr.)
6 Yale.
7 Nevada city.
9 An expressioi
of inquiry.
10 Vegetable
secretion.
11 To feel one’s
way.
12 Pen name of
Lamb.
13 Notches
14 Amused.
16 Bequeath.
20 Half (prefix)
23 Sphere of
action.
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Dyer, Ray J. The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 50, No. 146, Ed. 1 Monday, August 18, 1941, newspaper, August 18, 1941; El Reno, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc920878/m1/4/: accessed April 26, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.