The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 52, No. 57, Ed. 1 Wednesday, May 5, 1943 Page: 4 of 8
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The El Reno Daily Tribune
A Bit Ribbon Newspaper Serving a Blue Ribbon Coaunanlty
Issued dally except Saturday from 207 South Rock Island avenue,
and entered as second-class mall matter under the act of Uarch 3, 1179.
Capitol
Notebook
By John Owen
Associated Press Coareapondeot
_____I /~\KLAHOMA CITY, May 5—(A*)—
Tlie ASSOCIATED PRESS Is exclusively entitled to the use of re- A third of a million finger-
publication of all the news dispatches credited to it or not credited by Prints have gone to war for Uncle
this paper, and also to all the local news therein.
All rights of publications of special dispatches herein also are reserved.
RAY J. DYER
Editor and Publisher
BUDGE HARLE
News Editor
DEAN WARD
Advertising Manager
MEMBER
SOUTHERN NEWSPAPER
PUBLISHERS ASS'N.
MEMBER
OKLAHOMA PRESS
ASSOCIATION
Sam at the state capltol.
They are Increasing 1,500 a month.
They stand guard over essential
Industries in Oklahoma and else
where.
Floyd Perryman, chief fingerprint
expert for the state, said Its identi-
fication service was employed reg-
El Reno (Okla.)' Daily Tribune
A Lot of Help He Turned Out to Be!
It
4
The
has
DAILY SUBSCRIPTION KATES BY MAIL IN CANADIAN AND
BY CARRIER ADJOINING COUNTIES
One Week ----------------- $ .20 Three Months-----------11.501 ularly as a defense measure by
Three Months-------------- $2.25 Six Months---------------$3.00 transportation systems, manufac-
One Year----------------$8.00 One Year-------------$5.00 turing plants, the army and navy
Including Sales Tax I and other federal agencies besides
the normal duties It continues to
WEDNESDAY. MAY 5. 1943 | perform
Elimination of clearly undesirable
HE WILL DWELL WITH US WHEN WE SINCERELY WANT HIM: I persons who might otherwise gain
Jehovah will dwell with his people.—Rev. 21 :S. access to Important places In war
plants is one of the chief functions
Stodginess and Hush-Hush non take?'1away“much of the eie-
, , . .. ... ment of change In considering ap-
senate s Truman war investigating committee, which pllcantg although a showing that
proven itself an honest, aggressive, intelligent a job seeker has a "record" of arrest
agency—never afraid to criticize, hut never shooting off might not necessarily bar him from
merely to get headlines—has joined in the swelling chorus consideration. Perryman said.
of criticism against the navy’s “hush-hush policy.” I ’nie flles *n the technical division
_ .. ‘ . ... , . of the state safety department con-
Revealing publicly that submarine sinkings last year taln 331 „„„ of prlnU Most
reached 12,000,000 tons, and exceeded the combined con- of them come from Oklahoma law
struction of all the united nations, the committee says: enforcement agencies.
“German propaganda announcements that these sink- In Mareh' for instance, the dlvi-
ings are winning the war for Germany are not true. ^‘T1,,867 ,rom su,ch soarces,
B j and 297 of the owners turned out
“However, our own ‘hush-hush’ policy has given cred-
ence to such propaganda. Certainty is always better than
rumor. Frankness is the best answer to propaganda.”
Perhaps the navy, and also the army and President
•Roosevelt, will pay more attention to this blast from a
congressional committee than it has to similar protests
from newspapermen. These critics cannot he kissed off,
effectively if unfairly, as disgruntled self-seekers, short-
sightedly subordinating the county’s welfare to their own
desire to get and publish news.
* * •
Jr
4\>
#
rpHE navy—and the army, too— takes the attitude that it
is not interested in public criticism so long as it is con-
vinced its course is in the public interest. That is sound
attitude with which we never shall quarrel.
But the navy—and the army—should he very certain
that its conviction in such matters is not ordinary mulish-
ness, unwillingness to admit that brass hats are human
and can err.
When such a policy, outside the field in which the
admirals and the generals are trained, draws such uni-
versal condemnation over a long period, from demonstrably
disinterested agencies as well as from the press, isn’t it
possible that the amateur publicists are at least slightly
wrong ?
* * *
'J’HERE is no question here of deliberate autocracy on the
part of the armed services, and none of relative intelli-
gence. The brass hats are doing what they thing is right,
and they are nobody’s fools.
But they have been dabbling in a field about which
they know no more than we newspapermen know about the
handling of fleets or armies in battle.
The proof of the pudding is in the eating. Their policy
has resulted in lamentable lack of public confidence in
government publicity which, in a democracy, is enervating
and could become disastrous.
Americans are getting behind their work to get ahead
and using their heads to keep from getting behind.
Plants make a noise while growing, a scientist re-
vealed. We’ve heard that children do, too.
A lot of spring cleaning was prompted by folks seeing
the handwriting on the wall.
It’ll be quite an experience for Japan when the “sons
of heaven are blown to the other place.
When people get full credit for what they do, they
don t need credit for what they buy.
The worst villain in the movies is the one who sticks
gum under the seats.
to have records.
From defense plants, prints of
200 persons were received and 10 had
records. For the Frisco railroad,
the division checked 146 sets of
prints and found 20 linked with rec-
ords.
For the first three months of
the year, defense plants submitted
524 prints and 25 were of persons
with records.
Perryman, who has been with the
department seven .wars, came here
from Madlll. The technical division
has seven employes.
Service often Is a matter of min-
utes, and the cooperation given
agencies which utilize it without
charge Is appreciated, according to a
stack of correspondence from the
F. B I., secret service, the alcohol
tax unit, army and navy officials
and others.
* * *
KTOWADAY8 when the old “hear
IN ye" rings out in Oklahoma's
criminal court of appeals the spec-
tators really sit up and listen.
—And look.
For the marshal sounding off Is
the brown-haired, handsome bride
of one of Uncle Sam's sailors.
She Is Mrs. Eva Jane DeWHt of
Idabel. wed two and a half years
ago to Storekeeper J. W. DeWitt,
who Is off somewhere In the Pacific.
And she Is meeting the man-
power shortage by filling the place
of another sailor, James L. Ray,
who was law clerk for Presiding
Judge Dick Jones. Jones was un-
able to find a lawyer in his district
who could do stenographic work.
The dimpled marshal does that
as well as serve the court's proces-
ses, keep Its dockets, prepare or-
ders. keep Its financial records,
purchase supplies, preserve order
In the court and. at opening time,
march forth, rap sharply and In-
tone:
•'Hear ye. hear ye, hear ye, the
honorable criminal court of ap-
peals of the state or Oklahoma is
now in session. God save the
United States, this state and this
honorable court!"
Behind the Scenes
In Washington
s
BY PETER EDSON
NEA Washington Correspondent
Hollywood
Film Shop
By Ernest Foster
United Press Correspondent
I_JOLLY WOOD. May 5—(U.fi)—Six
* * months ago a big celebration
was in order If one of Hollywood's
Russian colony landed a movie role.
Today Russian character actors
FIRST look at some of the problems involved in maintaining full
employment after the war has just been made by the National
Economics Unit of the Department of Commerce in a study called
“Markets After the War." As the title indicates, this approach to
the problem is from a new angle—the viewpoint
g00dsr,nd n0t UJUal idea 0f k^p- autors
ng p.oduct.on gomg-any k.nd of production- are so much in demand that Holly-
tIv hPrl employment. wood ls cons|derlng seri0usly put-
1 oday, half the nations floods and services are I *„
bought by the federal government. But when all * th*”L°n “ A1 priority rating,
this federal buying Is sawed off sharply after the T16 sucltien change is the result of
war, this half of the country’s productive capacity ' a current cVcle of motion pictures
and employment can’t possibly be kept on public j dcPlct|ng life in the Soviet Repub-
works. The shelf of public works projects now ' llc Nearly every studio has at
being assembled by various federal, state and mu- I least one Russian film In produc-
nicipal planning commissions won’t begin to absorb j tion- and Russian actors are at a
all the people now on war work. And that's only ' premium. Husbands, wives and
the beginning of the problem. j even the children are working.
Assuming there will be a million casualties in After a decade of drouth, the
the war and that the armed forces after the war I downpour of opportunity Is wel-
will have to be kept at around two million, there come. Take the case of Konstantin
soldiers and sailors"' *** ^ t0 fi''d f°' th<? e‘8ht milIion discharSed 1 Shayne, 33-year veteran of the stage.
iei.s ,m sai 01 s. For seven years he pounded on Hol-
fPHE normal population growth of the country will, from 1940 to l>'w°od's gates, netting but two bit
A 1946, have increased the civilian labor force by two and a half ; roles for a11 hls Pulsed knuckles,
million potential wageearners for whom work will have to be found. | °ne was a two-line part in a low-
The job ahead is to confine unemployment to the unemployables, budget film and the other was a
who should number not more than two million. 1 three-line role in an even lower
It is assumed that most of the women and other war workers who budget picture,
were not gainfully employed before the war will go back to washing
dishes, minding babies and sitting in rocking chairs. But even so,
if all these increases in the labor force are added up, by 1946 there
will be ten million more potential workers to be employed than in
1940.
Inside
the Axis
Presenting Facte Assembled
by the Foreign Service
Division of the Office of
War Information
\WASHINGTON, May 5—(Special)
—The city of Vienna, once
known for Its gayety, now is a
German military hospital center,
according to the Berlin correspon-
dent of the Swedish newspaper Nya
Degligt Allehanda.
“Invalids and wounded dominate
the town picture," wrote the cor-
respondent. "All the schools In the
center of Vienna have been turned
Into hospitals, and everywhere In
the university district, which ls
near the clinics, nurses' are seen
pushing invalid chairs."
o**
A LBANIA is about all that re-
mains of Benito Mussolini's
Italian empire, and even Albania is
far from pacified. Persistent guer-
rilla activity in the mountains and
forest is reported keeping 100,000
Italian occupation troops busy.
According to a recent Russian
Tass news agency dispatch, new
detachments of Italian militia troops
have arrived In Tirana to carry out
mass executions of persons suspect-
ed of aiding the guerrilla movement.
Some 200 Albanians already have
been executed since the new troop
arrivals, Tass said.
* * *
I EADER of the small Danish Nazi
L-‘ party—the Dansk National-
socialistick Arbejderpartei — Is a
portly veterinarian from North Sle-
vig. Dr. Fritz Clausen.
Dr Clausen, perhaps the mast un-
popular man in Nazi-occupied Den-
mark, has been having hls trou-
bles since Apr. 9. 1940. the day on
which the Germans invaded that
country.
The mast recent Indignity suf
fered by Clausen, according to the
Danish newspaper Aalborg Amsti-
dende, occurred a short time ago,
when he took his car across the
ferry from the Danish mainland to
the island of Fune.
When he got to the other side,
the paper said. Clausen found that
he had two flat tires and a smashed
hat.
Truck Tire Recapping
Still Requires Order
OKLAHOMA CITY, May 5—0P|
—Despite the lifting of quota re-
strictions on truck tire recapping,
truck owners must continue to ob-
tain certificates from their local
ration boards, according to Jef(
Griffin, tire ration official.
This week the OPA withdrew the
ruling that certificates for recap-
pings or inner tubes can be Issued
for list B trucks only after the
25th day of the month. Thesa
certificates now may be granted at
any time. List B trucks Include
any deemed by the local board o$
doing work essential to the com-
munity.
Chinese Diplomats
Confer at Washington
WASHINGTON. May 5—</P)—Dr.
Wellington Koo, Chinese ambassa-
dor to Great Britain, and Dr. Wei
Tao-Ming, Chinese ambassador to
the United States, conferred with
President Roosevelt Tuesday.
Mme. Chiang Kai-Shek ls a White
House guest, and the president told
hls press conference that he had
talked with her at dinner Monday
night. Asked If this was Mme.
Chiang's farewell visit to the White
House, the chief executive said that
he was not certain about her future
plans.
Elm Glen
Down Memory Lane
May 5. 1933
Seventy-four runners will line up the the four 14-mile
points of the county at 1 p. m. tomorrow to start the
unique marathon race sponsored by El Reno merchants.
George McLean, exalted ruler, was named delegate to
the grand lodge July 16-22 in Milwaukee, Wis., during the
^gULar ™et,"K last ,light of the El Reno Elks lodge in
the B. P. O. E. home.
Miss Lorene Handley, El Reno highschool sophomore,
placed second in the piano solo contests at the annual
interscholastic meet in Stillwater yesterday.
Miss Dorothy Wilson, 620 South Miles avenue, and
Miss Rosemary Parks 816 South Ellison avenue, are spend-
ing the week-end with Miss Martha Collier at the Pi Beta
Phi sorority house in Stillwater.
Miss Nedra McCormack. Miss Corine and Charles Wil-
’ s.t.ude"t.s 01 tRe University of Oklahoma, Norman,
*re spe!ldJI1K *ne Wee^"end in the homes of their parents
Mr; wd McCormack, 517 North Evans av
nue an<1 MrS Brent Wilkerson, 614 North Evans
avenue,
ave-
Dieticians Are Needed
In Air Force Hospitals
OKLAHOMA CITY, May S—</P)—
Women dieticians are needed by the
army air force for dietetic work in
station hospitals, headquarters at
Tinker field announced Tuesday.
Those qualified will be given the
relative rank of second lieutenant
with base pay of $1,800 a year, plus
quarters and subsistence allowances.
Uniforms also will be furnished
Promotions will be in accordance
with army regulations. Applicants
must be not more than 45 years old.
They should apply in writing to the
air surgeon, Washington, or the sur-
geon of the station hospital at Tin-
ker field.
Tulsa Boy Woundel
By Cartridge Blast
TULSA, May 5—(/P)—Benny Lee
Sprague, 6 years old, shot himself
here Wednesday, although the child
did not have a gun.
Benny, the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Fred H. Sprague, was playing with
a .22 caliber rifle cartridge and
threw the shell down on the side-
walk, causing it to explode. The
bullet inflicted a flesh wound In the
boy’s cheek.
It wasn't because Shayne was a
newcomer trying to crash the por-
tals of filmland. Born in Kharkov,
Shayne is the son of Sergei Shayne.
well-known actor of the Imperial
theatre of Petrograd. His mother
was noted on provincial stages, and
his grandparents on both sides were
professionals.
Shayne himself played in stock
throughout Russia. He was a lead-
ing member of a troupe that toured
Turkey, Bulgaria and the Balkans.
He was a writer, director and actor
in Berlin.
In Hollywood he became discour-
pROJECT on top of this the advances in technology which will per-
mit the production of more goods per man-hour of labor, and,
says this survey, “assuming that people will want to work about the
same hours as in 1940, the potential capacity of the available man-
power in 1946 is almost 50 per cent greater than the total output
in 1940."
It is made clear by the Dcpai tment of Commerce that this is not
a forecast of what the volume of post-war business will be. It is
merely a measure of what this post-war business can be—of what
can be produced. There is an accumulated buyer demand being built
up by war shortages. There are accumulated war savings. For a ui ,lt TOUI1|. u
time they may keep production of peacetime consumers’ goods at an a “d and led ri™n"™
b'» * »"■ >*««™«•» ^,,7*11
1943 hls phone began to ring fre-
quently. It’s been Jingling ever
since.
He’s currently portraying an im-
portant role In M-G-M's "Russia,"
starring Robert Taylor. He has
played parts in "Mission to Mos-
cow," “For Whom the Bell Tolls"
and "Five Graves to Cairo.” And
he is signed to play in seven more
! pictures.
Mt. Zion
Lesson in English
Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Bross and Mrs. L. Allard attended
commencement exercises at the Putnam hiirhschnnl l««t
Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Miller of Winchester, ind were
expected to arrive today to be guests in the home of Mrs.
Millers brother. S. S. Macy, and Mrs. Macy, 702 South
William* avenue. „
- --------1----l--.--
Sentenced Soldier
May Leave State
OKLAHOMA CITY, May 5—OP)
—Jack Roberts, soldier under sen-
tence to serve live years for man-
slaughter In the first degree, was
given permission Tuesday by the
Criminal court of appeals to leave
the state under army orders.
Roberts was convicted ot killing
Sam Henderson, highway patrol-
man. while driving a car under
the Influence of liquor In Lawton
IE t941.
Services were weU attended at
Mt. Zion Sunduy morning. At the
clase of the services tile congre
nation met at the grove on the
L. L. Dungan farm for a basket
dinner which was given in honor
of Rev. G. L. Trabant on his
birthday anniversary. The after-
noon was spent visiting.
Mrs. Kermit Scott, who under-
went a major operation Saturday
morning in the El Reno sanita-
rium, is reported to be Improving.
Mr. and Mrs W. A. Clovis spent
Saturday evening with Mr. and
Mrs. Alex Hufnagel.
Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Clovis called
cn Mr. and Mrs. Luther Clovis
near Banner and Mr. and Mrs. M.
L. Brotherton Tuesday.
Mr. and Mrs Ralph Royse, Jr.,
of Wichita, Km., spent the week-
end with their parents. Mi', untj
Mrs. Ralph Royse and Mr. and
Mrs. E B. Brown.
Ray Green of Wichita Kan., and
Kermit Scott were callers In tliq
Ralph Royse home Saturday af-
ternoon.
It was in celebration of the
birthday anniversaries of D. D.
Davison of El Reno and W. F.
Schumacher that Mrs. Schumacher
entertained at a dinner Monday
evening. Guests besides the hon-
orees were Mrs. Davison and chil-
dren, Lillie Mae and Lewis Schu-
macher.
Jerry Hrdy of Stillwater spent
the week-end with hls .parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hrdy.
Mr .and Mrs. Edward Hunt and
son, who have been living in this
community the past two years,
have moved to a farm foul- miles
southeast of El Reno.
Mr. and Mrs. Arlene Clovis and
family of El Reno enjoyed a fish
fry In the W. A. Clovis home Sat-
urday night. I
Monday night visitors of Mr.
and Mrs. Ralph Royse and son,
Virdln, were Mr and Mrs Edward
Hunt and son.
WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: Do
not say. ■•'Every one of the eggs
were broken.” Say. "was broken."
One is the singular subject.
OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED:
Detour Pronounce de-toor, e as
in me, oo as in poor, accent on I case ^ typical, with similar
either first or last syllable. background and experiences, as
OFTEN MISSPELLED: Impa-ss- |
able mot passable.. ""f* “*“•
apen. Michael Dalmato, Leo Chali-
(unfeeling). apen Mlchae, Da,mato Leo Bol.
SYNONYMS Exculpate, exonev- gakov and Zaya Karaborlova.
ate, absolve, acquit, release, dis- I * * *
char?e IVAARY- PICKFORD, former screen
WORD STUDY: "Use a word 1 l*! star, will leave next week for
three times and it is yours." Let j Toronto, Canada, to auction off
us Increase our vocabulary by mas- | her aunt's home for charity, she
tering one word each day. Today's I said today,
word: SUBLIMATION; that which The actress donated the $22,000
is sublimed, or uplifted; the prod- house, known in Toronto as Mary
Elm Glen club will meet with
Mrs. Jim Everett on May 20 for an
all-day session.
Mr. and Mrs. Luther Brotherton
are planning to sell their property,
after which he will work in a de-
fense plant.
Mrs W. F. Schumacher visited
Mrs. Ernest Liebscher Friday after-
noon.
Mr. and Mrs. D. D. Davidson and
family of El Reno were supper guests
of Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Schumacher
Monday night, the occasion being
in celebration of the birthday an-
niversaries of Mr. Davison and Mr.
Schumacher. Additional guests dur-
ing the evening were Mr. and Mrs.
L. R. Shultz.
Mrs. Fannie Lamb called In the
Liebscher home Friday morning.
Milos Hrdy is attending the state
4-H club roundup at Stillwater this
week. He is a member of the Sailors
4-H club.
LETTERS FROM
THE PEOPLE
’ I 'HE TRIBUNE welcomes let-
* ters on current subjects from
Its readers. Because of the
limited space available, com-
munications should be limited to
400 words. The Tribune reserves
the right to shorten or reject
any letter. Unsigned letters will
not be published.
Enid. Okie.,
May 3. 1943
Ray Dyer. Editor.
The Dally Tribune.
Dear Mr. Dyer:
The chairman of the Canadian
county bond drive reports the sales
of bonds In the sum of $672,169
which exceeds the county's quota by
$205,769. The reported sales in the
district composed of 15 northwest
Oklahoma counties totals $5,308,000
which exceeds the district's quota
by $1,100,000
To the wholehearted cooperation
of yourself and your paper and also
to your chairman, F. H Morris, his
splendid corps of workers and all
those purchasing bonds the district
committee headed by W L. Stephen-
son extends grateful appreciation
for the work so well done.
Our boys in the fighting fronts
are giving their lives—we on the
home front can do no less than to
furnish them every possible t>7>e
of equipment available to crush
Hitlerism and exterminate the Japs
With cordial personal greetings
and congratulations to Canadian
county workers and bond purchasers.
I am.
Very truly yours.
MARTIN GARBER.
Executive Manager,
Group 2,
War Finance Committee.
AMERICAN WARPLANE
uct of a purifying process. “Re-
ligion Is the perfection, refinement,
and sublimation of morality."—
South.
Pickford's bungalow, and will turn
all proceeds over to charity.
On her return home she will stop
in several U. S. cities to appear at
war bond rallies.
* * *
DENNY GOODMAN. clarinet-
playing band leader, has re-
j returned to work at 20th Century-
! Fox studios with cigars for fellow
Lejrion Post Gets
$1,025 for Cigarets
OKLAHOMA CITY. May 5-
—Oklahoma City American Legion [ workers in celebration of the birth
post No. 35 has collected a total j of a daughter Sunday night,
of $1,025 in its campaign to ibuy | Qoodman said the baby, who
cigarets for soldiers, sailors and I weighed six pounds, eleven ounces,
marines in service overseas. The | will be named Rachel. Hls wife is
post already has shipped a total the former New York socialite Alice
of 270,000 cigarets—17 cases—and Hammond Duckworth,
the goal has been set for a million
smokes for the boys.
The post made plans at it§
meeting Tuesday night at which
Major William M. Alcott. com-
mander of the college air training
corps at Oklahoma City university,
was the principal speaker, to hold
a matinee dance for the cadets
and officers of the university con-
tingent.
HORIZONTAL
1 Depicted V S.
warplane, the
Consolidated
B-24C-
9 It-Nazi
Europe
13 At home
14 Breed of small
horses
15 Symbol for
uranium
16 That one
17 Near
18 Group of eight
singers
19 Perish
20 From
21 Steal
23 Flock of
pigeons
24 Evil (prefix)
25 Wager
26 Fewer
?8 Stretcher
30 Melee
32 Annoy
34 Small object
37 Bustle
38 Falsehood
39 2000 pounds
40 Alaskan city
42 Four (comb.
Answer to Previous Puzzle
anblblMHBBHMHiilNMiH
19 Palm fruit
22 Women’s
costume
24 Money
hoarder
25 They fly from
bases in Great
HBHararauEiB Hutianag
form) 61 Levantine
44 Speaks ketch
45 Power VERTICAL
47 South Amer- 1 Prevaricator
ican monkey 2 Within
49 Animal pelt 3 Self
51 Beam 4 Shelves
52 Distress signal 5 Painter
53 At this time 6 Weight
54 Upon allowance
55 Attempt 7 Grain
56 Beret 8 Royal Navy
57 Note in (abbr.)
Guido’s scale 9 Constructed
58 Stop! 10 Mineral rock
59Equal (prefix) 11 Wait for
60 One who rows 12 Let it stand
27 And (Latin)
A|P| 28 Laymen
29 Type measure
30 Sped
31 Artificial
language
33 Dirge
35 Plaything
36 Abstract being
41 Half an em
42 Platter
43 Minute
44 Street (abbr )
46 Mistake
48 Exists
49 It has -
motors .
50 Until
52 Hindu
garment
55 Article
56 Chinese
pagoda
59 Postscript
(abbr.)
Gus Vieweg departed Tuesday
for Poplar, Mont., after spending
two weeks with hls parents, Mr.
and Mrs. A. Vieweg. 904
Clark Rtree*
A dealer bought two articles a(
the same price. One he sold at
25 percent profit and the other at
25 percent loss, receiving $160 for
both. At what price did he sell
each article?
ANSWER
$100 and $60. Explanation—Add
the sum of 1.00 and 0.25 to thq
difference between 1.00 and 0.25;
East: divide into 160: multiply 80 by
Inv.v ‘.-<lt>*rae) from 160. I
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
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4
10
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12
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it
17
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20
21
U
n
23
I
24
24
27
1
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21
30
T»
i
sJ
33
34
35
ST
37
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Dyer, Ray J. The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 52, No. 57, Ed. 1 Wednesday, May 5, 1943, newspaper, May 5, 1943; El Reno, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc921390/m1/4/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.