The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 47, No. 304, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 16, 1939 Page: 1 of 8
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ASSOCIATED PRESS
EL RENO, OKLAHOMA, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 1939
L
I’aiU'l Discussion Tonight
Deals With Vocational
and Tracies Training
El Reno l.tdians Nearing End of Cage Schedule FREAK WEATHER IYou Hear
e Albert
NAL JOY SMOKE
NDRY
matically
Fiist general session ul the Par-
ent-Teacher asociations two-day
short course opened at 1:30 p. m.
today in the auditorium of Etta
Dale junior highschool with Paul
R. Taylor superintendent ' of E'
Reno schools, presiding.
Tiie program, which will be con-
cluded at a fourth general session
Fridas afternoon, is being conduct-
ed under auspices ol the El Reno
Parent -Teacher association council.
The theme is Education for To-
day.'
The session this afternoon open-
ed with group singing led by Wal-
ler P Marsh El Reno highschool
principal. Alter a brief devotional
service led by Rev J W Hodges.
Firs! Baptist church pastor, the ad-
dress of welcome was spoken by
Mrs Cecil R Kinder, president of
the El Reno P.-T A council.
Briggs Is Heard
A number by the El Reno high-
school s a cappella choir, directed
by Mis Mary Edwards, preceded
•an address by Mrs George E. Cal-
vert nl Oklahoma City, president of i
the Oklahoma Congress of Parents I
and Teachers who spoke on "The I
School in the Social Order."
"Putting First Things First in
Education' was discussed by Eugene
S Briggs, president of Phillips uni- \
versitv. Enid
In the school of instruction this 1
afternoon. Mr M. Alice Miller I
directed the school in parliamen- !
tary law. while Mrs. Charles E. |
Young tenth vice president of the
Oklahoma Congress of Parents and
Teache: explained dunes of P -
T A oflicers and standing com-
mit tees
Second general session of the !
short course is scheduled In the
highschool auditorium at 7:30 p. in
tonight with Mrs. Kinder presid- j
ing.
t
Panel Designated
A 15-minute concert by the El
Reno highschool girls' glee club,
directed bv Miss Edwards will be
followed at 7 45 p m by a panel
di.scu-.sion ol The Proper Place in
Vocational and Trades Education in
the Eementary and Secondary
School."
Serving as members of the panel
will hr Miss Ro>e Witcher. El Reno
highschool dean of girls, chairman;
Miss Evelyn Blades, home eco-
tPLEASE TURN TO PAGE 4>
BRINGS DOST TO
Sharp Drop In .Mercury
Is Predicted Over
State Tonight
Only five Karnes remain on the El Reno highschool basketball schedule before the Indians make their bid in
the regional tournament, and four of these dates are in Mid-State competition. The El Renoites go to Chickasha
Feb. 17 and will play at Classen Feb. 21. Capitol Hill invades El Reno Feb. 24 and the Tribe’s conference card will
be completed Feb. 28 when Central comes to El Reno. The fifth jrame yet to be played by the Indians is that
of Mar 3, a non-conference engagement with Clinton here. Thus far the Indians have played 20 games, win-
ning 13. In the Mid-State chase, El Reno has won six and lost two, to tie with Classen for second place in con-
ference standings at the moment. Members of the El Reno squad in the top row, left to right, are: Captain Johnny
Loyall. Lewis Cilmore, Roy Loyall, Bobby Boardman, Raymond Roblyer, Dewey Kessler, Sammy Shackelford, Alton
Niles and Coach Anderson Green. In the bottom row, left to rijfht, are: Frank Gibson. Fred Grulkev, jr., Floyd
Funderburk, mascot, Morris Hurst, Jack McKinster and Kenneth Kamm.
Boy Emulating Pirate Ends
His Act By Gulping Dagger
MANGUM, Feb. 16—(U.P’— Bud I in the aesophagus. The doctor call-
2,926 W hite Children In
City District
Small gains in the figures com-
McLeod a grade school student,'ed for buttermilk and cornbs.ad.
got a dagger caught in his throat, He got it and told Bud to start
but the' doctor to whom the boy eating.
was rushed did not try to extract Then with a fluoroscope the
it Instead, he fed Bud cornbread physician watched the dagger as
and buttermilk to help him swal- it went down with the cornbread
low it and buttermilk into the stomach.
BY BEAD SNAKE
Reno Woman’s Hand
Pierced By Fang
Mrs. Anna Barry, 313 North Hotl
in
Freakish weather which bi ought
a cold wave to the midwest and
floods and fogs to New England 1
was inflicting dust and snow on j
parts of Oklahoma today
Weatherman Harry Wahlgren at
Oklahoma City, told the United |
Press that temperatures would drop
sharply tonight, and that high
winds would prevail over most ot
the state.
He .said the weather would be ,
"cloudy and unsettled" this after- j
noon and much colder tonight and ]
tonroi row morning
Dust followed by light snow was
probable for the Oklahoma pan-
handle. Wahlgren reported
He forecast temperatures ol 14 to
22 degrees in northern Oklahoma
tonight and a temperature range
of 18 to 26 in southern Oklahoma
The dust and snow were- extend-
ing beyond the panhandle into
I sections of northern and central
Oklahoma.
Cold In Midwest
Some midwestern cities reported
the coldest weather of the winter.
Bemidji, Minn, reported a tem-
perature of 43 degrees below zero
and other Minnesota and North
Dakota points registered between
30 and 40 below.
U. S Forecaster H A Downs
at Chicago predicted rain or snow
over most sections of the north-
eastern areas today with a gradual
rise in temperatures. Cloudy and
colder weather was expected gen-
erally throughout eastern states
The storm which battered the
coast was centered today over
northern New England. It reached
a peak force of 65 miles an hour
in New York and caused one
death at New Brunswick. N J.
Two persons were killed at Pin-
son. Ala.
The gales swept along the south-
ern seaboard from Georgia, dam-
aging farm property and injuring
several persons A windstorm
damaged more than 100 homes and
P DWIN SPURR. 114 North K
avenue, amateur radio opera-
tor at El Reno, toriav contacted
Harlan Pringle, a student at
Drake university in Des Moines.
Iowa. Mr. Spun- immediately
notified Rev. and Mrs. M. B.
Pringle. 714 South Hoff avenue,
who humeri over to his house
to converse with their son by
means of the ether waves.
Mr. Spurr. whose call is
W5BVX. several years ago ob-
tained the first amateur radio
operator's 1.cense ever issued to
an El Reno resident.
Twelve students from Cana-
dian county are among the 201
on the honor roll at Central
State Teachers college in Ed-
mond tor the first semester of
the 1938-30 term, it is disclosed
by a revised list announced to-
day from the office of John O.
Moseley, college president.
The group includes Eiinore
Siegrist and Clara Ellen Waldo.
FI Reno; Ada M. Ebelmg. Mus-
stang; Lorraine Mary Kessler.
Piedmont; Weymouth Sallinger
and Mildred Sheriek. Yukon;
E-ther Clapper. Grace Clap-
per and Ruth Seatnands, Calu-
met; Vivian Maxine Jung. Em-
ma Niemann and Frederick
Dwight Perdue, Okarche
Students earned the honor by
making a scholastic average of
"B or higher for the entire
semester in all work taken
j Salts of War Materials To
European Countries
Bring Protests
El
15V ASSOCIATED PRESS
Britain's decision "to step up Hie
pace of her already vast rearming
today aroused a German charge
that the United States was "in-
creasing international tension."
Hitlers own newspaper Voelkis-
cher Beobachter assailed United
States sales of war materials to
European countries and attacked
what it called Washington's "de-
liberately false pretext of the
threatening of America'."
Britalns new expanded defense
plan will cost $2,900,000,000 this
year—an increase of $875,000,000
To finance it. Sir John Simon,
chancellor of the exchequer, told
parliament the government would
seek to double its borrowing power
I to $4,000,000,000.
The issue of peace or more war
m Spain still was undecided While
Spanish insurgents reported Fran-
co was preparing his seven best
army corps for an assault on cen-
tral Spain, high Spanish govern-
ment officials debated In Paris to
sue for peace.
In Budapest, Count Aul Teleki,
| former minister of education, re-
ceived a mandate from the Hun-
garian Regent. Admiral Horchy, to
form a new cabinet to succeed that
of Anti-Semitic Bela Imredi. who
| resigned because of his own parl-
Darlington Head Speaks I
F
At Kiwanis Luncheon
In Shanghai. Japanese authori-
ties served notice they intended to
land troops at Haiinen, 200 miles
down the coast from Shanghai.
i William A Gaines, superintendent ( [ate tomorrow, and warned all
of the state game larm at Dari- forejgn shipping to stand clear of a
30-mile zone in Taichow bay. Hal-
it all happened at the Ozark The celluloid toy. with 3-4-inch
piled in the annual school enumera- school Bud was emulating a pirate guards projecting from each side, avenue, was in serious condition .
tion probably indicate similar in-, by holding the dagger, a small was a bit bulky, but Bud got it from rattlesnake poisoning today ]’’!ree. persons at Asheville,
creases in the population figures celluloid one in Ills teeth. But the down. at the Catto hospital where she j and . rs injured one man
f F1 p...., p T,vim- c,in- da&Ser slipped, went down Buds' Dr Henry J Nelson, the corn- was taken after a freak accident i alad da™ae d ral, home® a*
throat Bud gulped and the dagger bread-buttermilk advocate, said to- tills morning at her home. ' ashington. N. J and ripped off
erintendent of schools, pointed ou. wenl out Qf s[g|lt handle first. day that lie believed Bud would An employe of the state museum
today. The boy was hurried to a hos- be "okay." that the hydrocloric service. Mrs. Barry was placing
The number ol children of school pital here where an x-ray picture acid of the stomach would dissolve a dead rattlesnake in a gallon
age in El Reno decreased from the showed that the 2'i-inch toy was j the celluloid. bottle of formaldehyde when the
CLUBS HOPING TO
Training School Planned
Here Saturday
| 1937 figures in the 1938 census, he
explained, but. increased to more
than the 1937 figures in tile cen-
sus recently completed under the
| supervision of Mrs. Dempsey Per-
kins.
White children covered by the
school enumeration numbered 2.-
900 in 1937. decreased to 2.866 in
11938 and jumped to 2.926 in the i
the roof of a church at Jersey
City
ington. reviewed activities and the
program of expansion at the game
farm as a guest speaker at Wed-
nesday noon's meeting of the El
Reno Kiwanis club.
Declaring that the institution al-
ready Is the largest exclusive game
larm in the United States, the
superintendent pointed out that
the 1939 program calls for doubl-
ing its capacity.
Two new brooders and two in-
cubators will give the farm a pro-
men is one of the few remaining
ports through which the Chinese
still are able to import supplies.
The Spanish nationalists blasted
Madrid with big caliber cannon
today while loyalist leaders contin-
ued to consider their policy and
their prospects of holding central
Spain.
Reports said that about 10(1 shells
of terrific explosive power fell in
Madrid yesterday, and did severe
FOR ME TEAMS TO OPEN FORUMS
- : snake slipped, piercing her hand
with its fang.
Although the snake had been
dead 18 hours, its poison made her [
ill and she was taken to the hos- j
pital for treatment.
On the advice of her attending
physician a special serum was pre-
pared by Dr J. W. Stovall at the
University of Oklahoma intirmary
VEHICLE LICENSE
BILL REDRAFTED
duction of 50.000 quail eggs during material damage In addition to
the 1939 season I causing five known deaths and
The construction ol 600 more | WOundi»g 12 persons,
laying pens will raise the total xhe gurLS opened up again last
number to 2.000. Mr. Gaines said.; mght. in salvos of three shells at
adding that improvements will cost i a tjrne Again at midnight they
$30 000. all of which, like regular j 0pe,u.ct t, bombardment In which
operating expenses, will be paid shejis fell all over the city, coming
liina' I
Umlication of progiams at meet-
ings of Canadian county home
demonstration clubs will be the
purpose of the officers training j
school that will be held Saturday
afternoon in El Reno. Miss Doreen
Fickel. county home demonstration
agrnt, explained today.
For presidents, vice presidents
and secretaries of all the clubs, the
training school will be held at 1:30
p m Saturday In the council room
of the El Reno city hall.
II will be conducted in the form
of a group discussion of meetings
and programs. Miss Fickel added.
Next Wednesday a clothing school i
current census, according to the Equipment Purchased Bv Informal Organization Is in Norman and rushed t0 E1 R™0
figures compiled by Mrs Perkins. U, * , by state highway patrolmen.
319 Negroes Enumerated FI Kono .iHyCOCS BtinjUf Instituted Patrolmen Assist
Negro children dropped from 338 __ _ The serum was brought from the
in 1937 to 316 in 1938 and totaled ..... , ... university by Sergeant F Dale
Provisions Are Made To
Increase Revenue
for out of hunting and fishing at intervals of about one a min-
license fees. uie.
9.835 Quail Released
In 1938 a total of 9.835 quail I
were released at various points |
in Oklahoma by officers of the |
Darlington game farm.
T
Ten to twelve men are employ-
ed regularly at the institution, ac-
cording to the -superintendent, and
ordinary operating expenses total
approximately $20,000 a year.
Ted MacDonald. Oklahoma City
field executive for the Boy Scouts,
also appeared as a guest speaker
A*, at the Kiwanis meeting, appealing
Sunnyland Limited Heads
Into Freight
319 in the last count. basketbal1 UMiforms tor E1 , First of a series of business men's peUv and Patrolman E. s. CIark
All children 6 years of age or Kenn elementary school cagers and , ^heona *blcbLbeJ'fdh of the state department of public
who will be 6 by next Sept. 1. and | Etta Dale junior hlghschooLs B, !iUcud FYdday noon at the Lyon safetv and immcdlatel>' administer-
team, purchased by the Junior] waff,e house William L Fogg.
chamber of commerce through its chamber of commerce president, j
of athletic sponsorship.1 announced today.
OKLAHOMA CITY. Feb. 16
-A revised motor vehicle license \ J?reater interest in Scoutin* at
bill, estimated to yield S8400.000 a
year in revenue, was reported fav-
who will be under 21 by the same
date, were counted in the personal
canvass.
A similar enumeration conducted
program
ed to Mrs. Barry.
While her condition was serious
this afternoon, she was reported
In rural school districts of Cana- I have arrived and will be distributed, ™ U|e Aguiar luncheons. hosnital attendants
dian county was being tabulated to- j as soon as possible. it ........>hich wl11 «* td the Public-
crably to the house today by the
revenue and taxation committee.
Its principal provisions included:
1 Repeal of the milage tax on
commercial trucks and busses.
Plans for the regular luncheons, resting well and in no great dan-
" V* ", j W]
riav" bv^MKx Glen^EveWn McCarty I possible, it was an-, wi„ ^ coated at the first , ux ™ ...» w«i ™..ra ,,u
day by miss Gien Ereiyn McCarty, j nounced today. meeting Friday. prepared for immersion into the
— s=r r-a
It was explained. I th« inninr Mat, muoH 1«■ —-----1— •=,— -,j J Slippery and heavier than she
i thought, the snake began sliding
El Reno.
Almost 200 boys are engaged ac-
QUINCY. Mass.. Feb 16—CU.R)—
Two men were killed and a score
of persons injured early today
tively in Scout and Cub activities, J when the Sunnyland Limited of
lie said, and at least 250 more j (be Frisco lines collided head-on
would join the organizations if! with a northbound freight train,
additional troops were available. J tw0 miles north of here.
Announcement was made of an j The dead;
interclub meeting Mar 15 at Wa- I George W. Bowers, engineer of
tonga, when El Reno Kiwanians
on farm trailers.
3. Higher taxes on big
2. Abolishment of the license tax i an£) tlieir wlves will meet with the
trucks
Watonga club.
for Canadian county club leaders
will be conducted by Miss Mae I
Thompson, assistant extension !
clothing specialist from Oklahoma ,
A. and M. college. Stillwater.
That session will be held at 10 :
a m Wednesday In the farm !
women's market room at 113 East !
Woodsotl street in El Reno.
Two members from each club |
will attend the clothing school ana
then report back to their various
organizations the information
learned. Miss Fickel explained.
Pattern alterations will be em-
phasized by Miss Thompson, ac-
cording to the county home dem-
onstration agent.
| the junior high squad. ; future occasions. Mr. Fogg said.
They were placed on display to- j Objective Announced
I day in a window of J. C. Penney
_ ~ », company. 117 South Bickford ave-] added, will be to enlighten or en- Lier hand
111 hummer V <imP;nue- whcre ,1,e.v W'L1 remain atltertain persons who wish to take
Applications Open
Only object of the luncheons, he! from her hands and a fang pierced . trucks
4 Slightlyjower rates on pleasure
cars and some reductions for small
Cemetery Project
Is Starting Today
I 5. A provision that trucks used ! Pro.tect
exclusively for larm hauling must Rrn0 remetery was to be started j cnroute to Atlanta. Names of the
Works Progress
for improvements
the passenger train. Amory, Miss
Laddie Ivy, porter on the pas-
senger train, Memphis.
The Sunnyland was pulled back
| into Amory, Miss., 14 miles from
j here, after the collision and the
' injured were removed to a hospital
Among the injured was Rev.
Israel H. Noe of Memphis, rector
administration | 0f St James Episcopal church, who
El | was shaken up and bruised. He was
least through Friday and possibly i an interest in them, as there will oCOFIIlli StciLtcd
over the week-end. ! he no programs, no regular btisi- ! ,
An exhibition program with all »ess, no dues and no concrete ob- ||| iHCd (. OlllCSt
four of the elementary school teams I Jectives for the informal organiza-
Applicationx for enrolment in
next summer's C. M. T. C. camp
will be received beginning today at .. . ...
“» T :ETES\r Z.TTcZ i £ president o, me ehember o,
Preliminary scoring of yards for
Ion. 100 South Rock Island avenife. j ^‘^‘“'^airman ~of 'the ’ jTvce'e I commerce, which will sponsor’ the -the 1939 Canadian county farm
Mr. Na.vlon is Canadian county: <uau man oi me ua.tcee,_________ _ H. . . _ i
. . , ... ; athletic committee said j meetings. Mr. Fogg appointed Dr.! home improvement contest spon-
chairman of recruiting. .athletic committee, said. Joseph M. Ozmum Ray Maher andi^ed annually by the El Reno
“ ™ = £\Trial Ordered In “ “ES S
structions to accept all applica- PembertOII ChSC All discussions will be informal. | ed.
tlons in the possibility that the
quota will be increased later.
The 1939 C. M. T. C. camp will
' he pointed out. and no minutes Felix K. West, former county
LODGE BUSINESS
MEETING IS SET
Regular business meeting of the
El Reno Elks lodge will be held
m 7:30 p. m. tonight in the lodge
hall, it was announced today by
Dr V P Cavanaugh, exalted ruler.
Plans for the annual Elks dance
which will be held next Monday
night and other business will be
considered tonight, he said.
._ . .,____ , ... . .. . ! will be kept and no recommenda- agent. Is serving as scorer.
, . .. . . . _ . . . . ■’ n8 ex i,i une in w m 1 ; tions or resolutions will be made' Yards of all entrants will be
be held from July 3 to Aug. 1. in- to enter a plea, S. M. Pemberton..,,., ______ . . . . . .
elusive, at Fort Sill. ' 28. of Oklahoma City, charged with | ^' p Llf f L"|B' i i no*’ and again 1. ter tn
Age limits for enrolees vary from driving an automobile while intox- 1 inTrint riismssi ^ ulu 'eons he rear, wi i wmneis mg itant-
17 to 24 for basic students to 19 lea ted pleaded not guilty at Ms; Xctfo^ene^mt^G ' t °f i,n,)rovemenU
to 29 for the most advanced stu- arraignment before Judge Emmett sllbJects of &eneral inU!reht' n'ade be,ween the two ”*** Per‘
dents. the recruiting chairman ex- , Thompson in Canadian -------- ■ -----—-------- 1 iods‘
county i COAST VISITORS
4 col,rt Wednesday afternoon. Tire j Mr. and Mrs. Chet Burger and;onp _has_ of thp farm hom„
Canadian county enrolees last defendant waived preliminary hear-! daughter. Miss Florene. of Yuba bv
ssjs*j, stmJiSS'^ SrtT, a
N' 5 a? °f Concho: Ed' I Information signed by H B i parents and grandparents. Mr. and FIREMEN CALLED
ward M. Daniels Jr.. Fort Reno: , Lowrev. state highway patrolman, | Mrs. A. G. Burger. 500 East Wade Grass fire Wednesday afternoon
^=nE „^rcy, .Arth“r C' R,Ieses ,hat Pemberton operated j street, and Mr. and Mrs. John 1 at 817 West London street was ex-
„ ..._____ 1 ' P' ames an automobile on U. S highway 66 Valiant. 506 West Oak street, and , tinguished before any damage was
ol the corn-
pay only 60 percent
mercial truck fee.
6. Retention of the annual 20
percent reduction In passenger car
license fees.
A. Francis Po’ta of El Reno
member of a sub-committee which
redrafted the bill into its final
form, estimated It would bring
in about $1,900,000 more annually
than now Is received from license
fees and the mileage tax.
In addition, cost of maintaining !
ports of entry, about $400,000 a
year, will be eliminated
tedav. George M March. city j other Injured persons could not
manager, said. | be learned immediately but rall-
Tlie project will provide for j road officials said few were In
the construction of two new en-I serious condition,
trance gates, curbs and drives | Tire engines of both trains were
I through all areas of the cemetery, i telescoped but no cars were de-
southeast of El Reno. ■ railed
To employ 27 men for three I a new engine was attached to
months, the project will be com- j the Sunnyland at Amory and pro-
pleted at a cast of $7,590. | ceeded to Birmingham The Sun-
nyland was enroute from Kansas
GUESTS OF BROTHERS
Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Soutter of
Harrisburg. Pa., have arrived for
a visit with her brothers. Robert
The yard improvement contest! F. Mayhue, and Mrs. Mavhue. and
C. R. Mayhue. 504 East Wade
street, Mr. and Mrs. Soutter made
the trip from Pennsylvania through
the Panama canal by boatl and are
Farm Outlook Is
Studied By Clubs
City to Birmingham via Memphis.
WEATHER
Mrs. .1. M Carlisle was discus-
sion leader when the Happy Hearts
home demonstration club met Wed-
nesday in the home of Mrs. Fred
Brandt, it was reported today by
Miss Doreen Fickel. Canadian coun-
ty home demonstration agent.
Forecast
Cloudy and unsettled; much cold-
er this afternoon and tonight with
strong northerly winds; possibly
snow in north portion tonight.
Livestock warnings issued. Ftgday
fair rising temperature in west
Mrs. Ralph Dobbs was hostess p0rtj0n
to the Goodwill home demonstra-
tion club Wednesday, when Mrs.
P Keller. Wayne T, Stephens and west of El Reno Feb 12 while in
Lloyd K. Wells, all of El Reno. I an intoxicated condition.
other relatives here Mr and Mrs 'caused, C G McCain El
Burger formerly resided in El Reno. I fire chief, reported today.
Reno
visiting here after a tour of Call- ] Elmer May served as discussion
fornia, Arizona and New Mexico. ] leader.
After their departure they plan to j Round-table discussions on the
spend some time in Mexico, Texas. ) farm family outlook for 1939 fea-
Loulslana and Florida before re- tured both meetings. Miss Fickel
turning home. said.
El Reno Weather
For 24-hour period ending at •
a. m. today; High. 60; low, 9;
at 8 a m . 43.
State of weather, cloudy.
Rainfall, none.
Sun rises tomorrow at 7:08.
Sun sets today at 6:08.
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Dyer, Ray J. The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 47, No. 304, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 16, 1939, newspaper, February 16, 1939; El Reno, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc921702/m1/1/: accessed April 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.