The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 52, No. 29, Ed. 1 Friday, April 2, 1943 Page: 4 of 6
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TOUR
EL RENO (ORLA.) DAfLY tRIfetTNE
The El Reno Daily Tribune
A Blur Ribbon Newspaper Serving a Blur Ribbon Community
Issued dally pxcept Saturday from 207 South Rock Island avrnur,
and pntered as .second-class mnll matter under the act of March 3, 1879.
RAY J. DYER
Editor and Publisher
BODGE IIARI.K
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 publications of special dispatches herein also are reserved.
MEMBER
SOUTHERN NEWSPAPER
PUBLISHERS ASS’N.
FRIDAY, APRIL 2, 1943
MEMBER
OKLAHOMA PRESS
ASSOCIATION
DAILY SI'BSCRIPTION RATES BY MAIL IN CANADIAN AND
BY CARRIER ADJOINING COUNTIES
One Week $ .20 Threp Months -------- 11.50
Three Months ... *2.25 Six Months —........... *3.00
One Year . *8.00 One Year ---------- *5 00
Including Sales Tax
FRIDAY. APRIL 2. 1943
SOME CALL THIS THE SUBCONSCIOUS MIND. BUT IF YOU HEED
THE INNER VOICE JT WILL GROW STRONGER AND CLEARER:
The Hotv Ghost whom the rather will send in my name, hr shall teach
you all things.—John 14:28.
The Wastefulness of Hoarding
UOARDING means something more than providing and
economizing materials for future use. In a world of
action, hoarding brings everything that is hoarded to a
standstill. Now we are, as a nation, using every effort to
win the war; and, to win the war, foodstuffs and materials
of every kind must he made to work, and every one must
work to a direct purpose. That movement is the law of
life is proved by its application to inanimate things. It
is being declared in a large and dramatic way by the
world’s need to make every act and material thing 100
percent effective.
The law of movement, applied to inanimate things,
the effect of hoarding, frequently is disclosed by failures of , rious doubts that he will attempt
industrial plants after years of apparent prosperity. Such
failures are mainly due to the misconception that accumu-
lated materials in storage or in plants has active manu-
facturing value, whereas it has merely the basic value of
unused raw material, however changed in form or how-
ever great the expense involved in changing it from metal
pigs. When credit based on such imaginary worth is ex-
hausted, the real intrinsic market worth of material and
equipment discloses itself.
Off the
Record
By United Press
QKLAHOMA CITY. Apr 2—(UR)
^ — Adminl.stratlon Democrats
believe they have delivered an old-
fashioned solar plexus blow to Ok-
lahoma Republicans In revelation
of a *5.000 cash gift from United
Slates Senator E. H. Moore to Leon j
C. Phillips, former governor.
Election of Moore, a 1940 Wlllkie I
Democrat, last year has boomed
state O. O. P. enthusiasm to such )
an extent that many Republicans I
linve predicted n "landslide" next
year.
However, the Democrats feel they
have driven a wedge Into Republican
chances in 1944
Although Moore is secure In his
senate seat until 1948. capitol poll- *
tical sages predict the Democrats
will club their adversaries at every
turn In the political road next year
with the *5.000 gift—Which was
made two months after Moore had j
defeated U. 8 Senator Josh Lee in j
the November elections.
Capitol observers are convinced |
Phillips has "killed himself off" so 1
for os future political campaigns I
are concerned. They aver that nelth- ]
er Republicans nor Democrats will l
want him as a candidate.
Phillips, the observers say. would |
have to defend the *5.000 Rift In
every speech he made. Thus, there
are those who believe he will fade
from the political scene. He had
been reported planning to run
ugninst State Senator Tom Anglin
next yenr. but now there are se-
Prolific
-rr
Dead as Mutton
a writer H. G. Wells must Ik* taken seriously. As a
prophet, sometimes he is inclined to take in too much
territory, like the bar-fly who announced his ability to
lick any son-of-a-guii in the world and discovered that he
was boasting to John L. Sullivan.
Mr. Wells expresses a profound conviction that “the
newspaper is as dead as mutton and that it will never come
back.” We have no equivalent authority as to English jour-
nals, but we suggest—too late, of course—that the eminent
author should have consulted the 104.1 Editor and Pub-
lisher year hook before he committed himself in such sweep-
ing terms.
In the United States our “dead as mutton” newspapers
enjoyed in 1042 the greatest circulation in their history,
capping an unbroken year-by-year advance that began in
1018. As 1042 ended, morning and evening newspapers
were selling more than 43,000,000 copies daily. This rep-
resented an increase of 3,400,000 over their pre-war total.
* * *
fpHAT does not suggest anything resembling: death. It
would seem to indicate enormous vitality, particularly
since many newspapers, to meet skyrocketing costs, found
it necessary to increase sales prices.
It is Mr. Wells’ idea that after the war we shall dial
NEWS on our telephones and “listen then to a summary
of what has been happening in the last two or three hours.”
This is entirely possible. If the telephone company
needs a bit of needling about establishing such a service,
newspapers might encourage and assist them. A telephone
bulletin news service might do exactly what radio news
bulletins have done—whet public appetite for news of the
day.
i ;j * * *
jyflANY newspaper publishers suffered most of the pangs
of death when the radio began broadcasting news. They
feared the lightning speed of this “competitor.” It de-
veloped, however, that the radio was a newsboy crying
headlines and telling listeners why they should rush out
and buy papers.
The daily newspaper has its faults, individual and
collective. The wise editor never lets a day pass without
seeking to bettor his service to his readers. Neverthelss,
there is no medium of news distribution that can rival the
newspaper for combined s|>eed, accuracy, completeness and
impartially.
any kind of a race.
* * «
HE 19th leid.slature held true to
Governor Robert S. Kerr's
wishes to shun new tax legislation.
Only the 10 percent juke box tax
was enacted That was favored by
the governor, who felt that the mu-
sic machine operators, now en-
joying their greatest prosperity be-
cause of the war boom, should chip
In their bit.
The Juke box tax Is expected to
help fill the revenue gap left by de-
creased beer tax Income resulting
from the week-end beer curfew and
.separation of beer taverns and dnnee
halls.
* • •
CPEA KING of coincidences, the
legislature adjourned on Mar.
31. 1923—the same date as adjourn-
ment of the 19th session this year
That year a lawyer named Tom
Anglin of Holdenvllle was speaker
of the house.
This year the same Tom Anglin,
now a state senator, was president
pro tempore In the upper chamber
* * *
/~\NE senator and one representa-
tative have been accused by
some of their colleagues of being
"too conscientious" nnd retarding
legislative machinery.
They are Representative John
Hollimnn of Bnrtlesvllle and Sena-
tor Theodore Pruett of Anadnrko
However, they also have their de-
fenders who Insist that "somebody
In the legislature ought to be con-
scientious. "
Inside
the Axis
Presenting Earls Assembled
by the Foreign Servlet
Division of the Office of
War Information
VV/ASHINOTON. Apr 2—(Special)
” Norwegian Nazis are trying to
break the back of church resistance
' against Major Vllkun Quisling's
puppet regime by conscripting re-
calcitrant clerics for forced labor.
Gift of $400
To Elks ('enter
Is Announced
(Continued From Page One)
ry; Vincent Harper, Paul R. Tay-
lor, Neill B Waido, Robert M. Mal-
Jonee, N. A. Nichols. Oeorge M. Mc-
Lean. Ray Dyer and W E. Bates.
Bridge Games Concluded
During the lodge meeting, the
ladies concluded the season's series
of bridge games. In the games last
night the high score award was
_ , won by Mrs. Wilfred Ward, while
Evidence of this was contained in wcond htgh went t0 Mrs Ray bn.
a letter published recently by the j )lngh(im and loW t0 Mrs. M A. j*T.
Swedish newspaper Nya Dagligt J {rey
Allehanda. The letter, said to have ' , ...
been written to the Norwegian la- W ’inPrsJ01' the, were
bor exchange director by Ragnar linn0,unced at the conclusion of the
Sckancke. Quisling's minister of LVef*sf camf ™ey are “rs
. . Pred Hutson, jr., first prze; Mrs.
chu.ch and education, was quoted ___h „J, „„
as follows
"At the request of the minister
president (Quisling), we are asking
Ray Dillingham, second: and Mrs
J. W Newqulst, low.
Those participating in the bridge
Behind the Scenes
In Washington
BY PETER EDSON
N'EA Washington Correspondent
Hollywood
Film Shop
By Ernest Foster
United Press Correspondent
J_JOLLY WOOD, Apr. 2 — (U.R) —
^ * When Allan Napier arrived in
the United States in 1939. his first
bit of American advice was that he
cpHE studied attempt of the administration to treat John L. Lewi5
1 no different Irom any other labor petitioner is taking somewhat
of a beating and it begins to look ns though the United Mine Work-
ers had a good chance to get some, if nm all,-of their requested *2
a flay increase in their basic wage rate for the
next two years.
I lie attempt to make i.ewis accept for miners u must never mention his relation-
new wage agreement within the Little Steel for-
mula now has a good chance of defeat. Lewis
won't have to strike his miners to win his demand-
either. For wily old John L. I,ewis has added up
the tricks in his hand and made his bid so care-
fully that today he seems to hold the advantage
He has forced the President to ask him to eon-
icnl candidates according to the law MrS' ^ Ha™ey;
on the national labor contribution. Schoonover Mrs Charles O.
Canon, Mrs. Earl R. Woodhouse.
"The church leadership (Quisling's Mrs j A Hunter. Mrs. Rov Steven-
priests) find it extremely important
that the clique of theologians and „ VI _
priests who sought to use the church “ 8 N VrT: 0t^ F°x
to attack national socialism be call- “rS' _J“ “axeyu Mr*; Walton'
ed up for labor service as soon as ™rs, 8 R' A
possible. If (his letter is to have : f Frank
the Intended effect, the priests must 8 M' McGInley M”' J w Per‘
be transferred to points as far as I ”' Mrs ^de Maxey. Mrs. J.
E. Simmons. Mrs. Melvin Johnson.
Mrs. Charles F Clark, Mrs. J W
passible from their former resl
dences."
Newquist.
Mrs. Emmett Harris, Mrs. Church-
Mrs. LeRoy
Searcy. Mrs. Frank M Hromada.
i Mrs. P. B. Myers. Mrs. Fred Hut-
son. jr.. Mrs. A. E. Bogan and Mrs.
E. E Blake.
ship to the late British Prime Min- | for the Quisling women, the news-
ister Neville Chamberlain. 1 paper said.
This was a year after Munich—
a year that had witnessed the popu-
According to the Swedish news-
paper. the names of 75 recalcitrant
| priests and 200 theologians were! el ^ Zimmerman
| attached to the letter.
* * *
■"THE SWEDISH newspaper Svens-
I * kn Dagbladet rrported that Nor-
wegian women belonging to Major
Vidkun Quisling’s Nasjonnl Sanding
party are complaining that patrio-
tic Norwegian merchants discrlmate
against them because of their as-
sociation with the Quisling Nazis. | — 1 < — ■
Special stores with Nasjona! Sam- J Henry McCann. Calumet, trans-
ling personnel have been requested acted business in El Reno Tuesday.
Local Briefs
larly expected betrayal of the pact
linue negotiations with mine operators beyond the ^ T S’'PP°^ >o bring "peace
a in our time." Chamberlain then was
April 1 deadline. The administration has thus .. ,
played its best card this early in the game, and he most mal,Rned man in Europe
Lewis's hand is thereby materially strengthened.
Two recent coni industry developments ovei
AN
r v v
Mr and Mrs. J. H. Craven, 105
North Hoff avenue, transacted
business in Watongn Wednesday.
ACUTE paper shortage has
brought about a sizeable cur-
tailment in the publishing of Ger- -
man classical literature, but Ger- Mrs. R. M. Mallonee, 112 South
man book stores still are getting Barker avenue transacted business
Now, in Columbia's "Appointment I ^ky^-M^'Kampf^aL"^
Edson
which Lewis had no control helped considerably que opportunity
In Berlin." Napier is having the uni-
Down Memory Lane
Apr. 2. 1918
Miss Helen Gilmore, daughter of Hollis Gilmore, who
attends Ardery college at Oklahoma City, is home ill with
tonsilitis. She will undergo an operation this week.
Dr. and Mrs. T. F. Clifford have purchased the Harms
home at 502 South Williams avenue, and will move there
this week. Mr. and Mrs. E. P. Kelly, who have been resid-
ing there, will move to the W. C. Smith home on South
Roberts avenue. Mr. and Mrs. F. N. Irving have purchased
the home of Dr. Clifford, 419 North Rock Island avenue.
Miss Marie West has as her guest Miss Runk Fraley
of Ardmore.
Miss Mary Shuttee entertained a number of friends
informally yesterday afternoon. The time was spent knitt-
ing, after which dainty refreshments were served.
El Reno's war stamp bank is nearing completion and
the structure will receive the finishing touches within the
next few days. It is the handsomest structure of its kind
in the state.
Apr. 2, 1933
Mr. and Mrs. Roderick Rice, east of El Reno, celebrated
their fourth wedding anniversary Friday night at a 7
o’clock dinner.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Clark, 500 South Hadden ave-
nue, attended the concert given by the Shrine band in
Oklahoma City this afternoon.
Mrs. D. W. Forrester of Amarillo, Tex., is visiting in
the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Ferguson,
11HJ South Ellison avenue.
Cattle Rolling
To Osajje Lands
P4WHU8KA. Apr 2 — (A1) —Tile i
railroad lines that cris-cross the |
rolling grazing lands of Osage
county sre burdened these spring
days with the usual but now more
precious freight—cattle.
They are carrying cattle In
greater numbers to the grazing
lands where the herds will put
on more pounds before they are
shuffled off to the ultimate desti-
nation of all good beef cattle—
the slaughter house
Today, with the meat demands
rising by the hour as more men
join the armed forces, more men
and women enter war industries,
and more shipments are convoyed
across the seas, this cattle center
is keeping pace.
County Agent Fred Ahrberg pre-
dicts that the number of cattle
put out to summer pasture will be
the greatest in the history of
Osage county.
And the ranges are ready for
them, for despite the dry spell
with which the winter bowed out,
the pasture condition (shelterthan
the average for the last 10 years.
Ahrberg says.
The bluestem land will be crowd-
ed with cattle Indeed if the Indi-
cations from early shipments carry
out the prediction that more cattle
will be grazed here than ever be-
fore.
For approximately 250,000 head
of cattle found summer pasture
in the county a year ago.
The cattle which stayed out on
the ranges all last winter also are
in good condition, the county
agent reports, for the winter was
a light one with but two really
cold spells.
Osage county cattlemen taking
advantage of the light winter, also
left more cattle graze on the
ranges through the last winter
than ever before.
in laying the foundation tor his demands for wage
_ ..... increases- Firs<. on the insistence of Solid Fuel-
( o-ordinator for War Harold L. Ickes, the industry went from a five-
day to a six-day week. Naturally, miners were to get time and a hall
for that sixth day's operation
jVJINE operators put loim me claim that it the price ot their labo,
was to be greater, they would have to receive a higher price for
dial. Ollice of Price Administration granted the operaiors' demand-
1(1 the extent o! 22 cents a ton—not for just the coal mined on over-
lime, bid for all coal mined, whether on straight time oi time and a
Tins government-approved double play was right into Lewis's
to Justify the |
Chamberlain foreign policy accused
of being "responsible" for a war
that is still raging.
As a British intelligence official,
riapler is showing George Sanders
a comparative study of the British
and German armed forces.
"On Oct. 2. 1938." reads Napier's
script, "we jiad 400 tanks. Germany
had 20.000 On Oct. 2. 1938, we
had 800 or 900 planes, all obsolete, i
Nazi propaganda works, the Swiss
newspaper Neue Zuercher Zeltung
reported.
Books still are the most popular
kind of gift in Germany, according
to the Swiss report, which said the
book shortage had become so critical
in Oklahoma City today.
Fred Wewerka. 820 South Ma-
comb avenue, departed Wednesday
for a business trip of several days
to Pampa. Tex
Julian Craven. 105 North Hoff
that the Nazis had ordered book- aVenue,' ,„Thursday *«**•
■ noon for Fort Sill, where he will
sellers to withdraw an "adequate j
proportion" of books from their
stocks to be lent out instead of
sold outright.
1938 we had 75 Bren gun carriers.
1.000 35-mm. machine guns. .
"Good Lord." ejaculates Sanders.
“What have we been doing all 'this
time?”
“Trying to act like gentlemen."
Napier replies
hands. All n did was let the government provide money for wage Germany had 40.000. On Oct. 2,
increases Lewis was about to demand. If the government could ap-
prove inflationary price increases to operators, how could it con-
sistently deny increases to miners.
The next good break Lewis got was in the recent Circuit Court ot
Appeals declaratory judgment in which Tennessee Coal and Iron
was ordered to pay members of the Mine, Mill and Smelter Workers'
Union for all lime workmen are underground. Coal miners are not
now paid on this “portal to portal" basis from the time they enter
the mine to the time they leave. Instead, they are paid only for the
lime at woik at the bottom of the mine. But here is a federal court »u »•
decision which sets a major precedent and compels employers to pav then,lc- Th«y were compiled orig-
al! miners for a longer work day, or else shorten the time actually innIlv 1,1 “ confidential pnrilamen-
spent at work. It is equivalent to ordering that all coal miners be
paid an average of nine hours wages additional per week.
Lewis won another point in getting his request for a continuation
of negotiations with the mine operators from April 1 to April 30,
with the understanding that any agreement would be retroactive to
April 1 Then came his best break ot all—allowing himself to be
maneuvered into the position of having to be subpoenaed to appear
before the Truman Senate Committee investigating labor efficiency
in tlic war effort. Her? was a public platform and sounding board
easily- woi th a million dollars to the mine leader, to present his ar-
guments.
Farmers Complaining
About Ducks, Geese
be stationed for army training.
Mrs O. L. Dale, 501 South Rock
Island avenue, returned Thursday
from Roswell, N. M.. where she has
been visiting her son. Oran Dale,
and family.
CHEROKEE. Apr 2—(VP)—Farm-
ers living north of the Salt Plains
lake and wildlife refuge in eastern
Alfalfa county are complaining that
_ . the wild ducks and geese, which
The figures in the script^ are au- spent the winter there, are eating
tons and tons of greatly needed
Plans Are Made
For Sod House
Pupils To Help
With Farm Work
tnr.v report
"What most people don't know.”
insists Napier, "is that even while
Chamberlain was 'trying to act like
a gentleman.' he had ordered the
construction of shadow factories
overnif ht into armament factories.
"Chamberlain sincerely wanted
and hoped for peace.” says Napier.
"He went to Munich knowing that
England was totally unprepared for
war He sat there at that confer-
ence table fighting a one-man de-
laying action, so that if war came
England could be ready.
"The scenarist. Horace McCoy.
feeds.
Miss Lola Pratt, Tulsa. Mrs.
Harvey Thacker of Weatherford.
Miss Eleanor Converse of Ft 111-
water and Mrs. Dutton Biggs of St.
Louis, Mo., have been guests in
the home of Mr nnd Mrs. J. H.
Craven, 105 North Hoff avenue.
Miss Pratt and Mrs. Thacker are
Ii the waterrowl remain much sisters of Mrs. Craven. Mrs. Biggs
longer, the farmers say. they also is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
will do extensive damage to newly i Craven. She departed Tuesday for
sown fields. j her home in St. Louis.
MOVIE ACTOR
HORIZONTAL
1,5 Pictured
film star
12 Poker stake
13 Not (prefix)
14 Weird
15 Measure of
area
Answer to Previous Putsle
TIh
o
GOODWELL. Apr 2—i/Pi—A sod ENID. Apr 2—oPi—Rural school states ,lle tr»e situation more elo- i 16 Tendencies
house of the type used for dwellings pupils of Garfield county will per- qil<int,v thnn T can: How can we
by many of the pioneers of this sec- form some farm work this year to [££ “or^ea^lS can“we
tion of Oklahomn. will be built on help solve the farm labor shortage fight them with—our bare hands?”
the rampaus of the Panhandle A but they won't lose out In school do-
and M. college here after the war. ing it.
Instead of approving a proposal to
H t- I
DIRO
Ism
When war came, a year later,
England was ready."
B. Neff, a "No Man's Land" pioneer
and president of the Panhandle shorten the school term by some
Museum and Historical society has streamllnpd Process, teachers pledged
help in solving the labor shortage
by making older pupils available
for farm work during the times
announced.
The sod house. Neff said, will
house the relics and records of the they are needed.
Look and Learn
*
ra
a
a
aUUEH
historical society. Funds are now
being raised for its construction.
Each individual district was left
1. Why is a part of the elbow
called the “funny bone?"
2. Who is Azrnol, in Jewish and
to make decisions on the needs or Mohammedan religion?
its respective section of the county.
3. Which bird produces the
Lesson in English
Farm work is seasonal in this largest eggs?
wheat country, said the teachers. 4 Where is the "Land of the
thus eliminating the need for dis- White Elephant?"
19 Sea eagle
21 Floor with
brick
22 Earth
25 Long fish
26 Peel
27 Upper part
29 Till forbidden 54 Remain
(abbr.)
30 2000 pounds
31 Sins
33 Redacts
36 Properly
39 House pet
40 Atmosphere
41 Laughter
omasDl
JEfffl
HGBS
missing school early.
Farm bureau leaders were pleased
GREEN BAY'S LETLOW JOINS
GREEN BAY. Wis.— (UP) —Rltss
Letlow. veteran Oreen Bay guard,
has Joined the army. A product
of San Francisco university, he
finished hte seventh season In 1942
playing two positions, guard and
tackle.
several crisises.
plural form. (Pronounce last syl-
lable as seize.
OFTEN MISPRONO UNCED:
Lever. Pronounce the first e ei-
ther as in me or as in met.
OFTEN MISSPELLED: Debon-
air. Preferred to debonsire or
debonnaire.
SYNONYMS' Mercy, compas-
sion, clemency, forbearance, for-
giveness. kindness, lenience, len-
iency, lenity.
WORD STUDY:
5. Who was Aeolus?
ANSWERS
Crises is the "humems* ^cH Z'nLeZ
sound
43 Egyptian
sun god
44 Chatter
47 Perform
49 20 quires
52 Flower
WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: Do
not say, "We have passed through wlth thP Plan which will free older
harvesting work as they are needed,
Arthur Criswell, Garfield county
superintendent of schools, said.
Farmer and Three Dogs
Are Thinning Coyotes
1 the upper bone of the arm.
2. The angel of death, who
watches over the dying, and sep-
arates the soul from the body.
3. The ostrich.
4. Siam.
5 Ancient Greek god of the I
winds.
WOODWARD, Apr. 2—</P>—Jake .
Boland. Woods county farmer, won
a decision over a coyote In a re- ■
Use a word cent hand to c,aw 130106 with the
Problem a Day
three times and It is yours." Let scrappy animal.
If a man spends 1-3 of his
us Increase our vocabulary by mas- Out on a hunt with three dogs,' mon6V Plus *55. and then has left
taring one word each day. Today's Boland rode up to see one of his of hls money plus *37. how-
word: INSTINCTIVE; determined dogs whipped by- the fighting coy-' uc*3 dld he have at first?
by natural impulse; acting without ote and the other two injured ANSWER
reasoning. "Have we had instlnc- When he dismounted to help the j *552. Explanation-Add 1-3 and
tlve intimation of the death of animals the cornered prairie wolf i-2; subtract from 6-6 divide This
----* **-'■ attacked him 1 ' 1
some absent friends?"—Hall
result inte the sum of 55 and 37
1
2
>
4
11
t
to
11
1
P
*1
L
r
*4
*
■u
I
45
«7
IT
’
I
“
*« M
1
EL
7 Selenium
56 Religious (symbol)
58 Editor (abbr.) 8 Him
59 Signs
62 Tantalum
(symbol)
63 Soothsayer
65 Servant
66 Ages
VERTICAL
1 Container
2 Half an em
3 Perfume
4 Tendon
5 Barbarian
6 Completes
(prefix)
30 Tellurium
(symbol)
32 Condition
34 Sailor
35 Heavenly
body
37 Untruth
38 Year (abbr.)
. 41 Possesses
RIaU 42 He is a fa-
mous charac-
ter ——
44 For the af-
firmative side
45 Wake up
46 Genus of
plants
48 Domesticate
9 Mineral rock 50 Paid notice
10 Turkish coins 51 Apportion
11 Belief S3 South Dakota
15 Near (abbr.)
17 Early English 55 Still
(abbr.) 57 Variety
18 Therefore (abbr.)
20 Sprite 58 Bitter vetch
21 Fright 60 Symbol for
23 Detail sodium
24 Learning 61 Yes (Sp.)
26 Seed container 64 Babylonian
28 Before deity
Hi
P
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Dyer, Ray J. The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 52, No. 29, Ed. 1 Friday, April 2, 1943, newspaper, April 2, 1943; El Reno, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc921051/m1/4/: accessed April 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.