The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 53, No. 16, Ed. 1 Sunday, March 19, 1944 Page: 4 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: El Reno Daily Tribune and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
rn r>---//%!•!«* \ n-iu. rp,.:u____
rujj___ w « ■•»
wSxon/'lntr MoWsVl 10 IQild
Four
El Reno (Okla.) Daily Tribune
The El Reno Daily Tribune
A Blue Ribbon Newspaper Herein* B Blue Ribbon Community
Issued dail? except Saturday from 207 South Rock Island avenue, J
and entered as second-class mall matter under the act of March 3, 1879
RAY J. DYER
Editor and Publisher
BUDGE HARLE
News Editor
DEAN WARD *
Advertising Manager
Questions
and
Answers
on the
American Red Cross
Yah! Und Ve Can Lick an Invasion, Too!'
The ASSOCIATED PRESS Is exclusively entitled to the use of re-
publicaUou of all the*ncws dispatches credited to it or not credited by
his paper, and tUi to all the local news therein.
All rights of publications of special dispatches herein also are reserved, pose of the Red Cross program in
water safely?
Q. What is the extent and pur-
51 EM BE k
SOUTHERN NEWSPAPER
PUBLISHERS ASS'N.
"lMIl.lT SUBSCRIPTION RATES
BY CARRIER
MEMBER
OKLAHOMA PRESS
ASSOCIATION
BY MAIL IN CANADIAN AND
ADJOININU COUNTIES
$ .20
Three Months-------
_____*130
$2.25
Six Months__________
____*3.00
One Year_________
______*8.00
One Year________
. . *5.00
including Sales Tax
Sunday, March 19, 1911
‘iTiTlIAS AN AMAZING STORE OK STRENGTH HE IS EAGER TO
SHARE WITH YOU: The Lord Is the strength of my life.—Ps. 27:1.
p. since 1914, almost three mil*
! ll<*s eertlficates have been issued
byi the Red Cross for courses com-
pleted in water safety. The pro-
| gram is aimed primarily at the
j prevention of death from drown-
ing. The rate of drownings in this
! country is now less than half what
■ it was when tire Service was estab-
lished A functional swimming and
[ water safety course is given for
members of the armed forces and
for those about to enter the s'er- |
vice. Tills course has to do par-
ticularly with training men Tor
survival in the water in desperate
situations. These jltuations occur
when men arc forced to swim
Will Germany Try It Again?
. . a » it o: iA Qnk.iUo wnen men are iorueu w swim
flow about reading a book . A book by Sigi id oc . fully clothed and carrying equip-
^ Vt»(C|*an American newspaperwoman, formerly head <>l ment, or are handicapped by oil
the Berlin office of The Cnicago Tribune. According to ; Dr floating debris.
“Germany Will Trv It Again” (which seems to have drawn
cheers from all quarters) we'd better make pretty sure
about Germany, unless we want them landing at Atlantic
City and Palm Beach some time around 1965.
Q. linn are Red Cross instruc-
tors in first aid, water safety, or
accident prevention qualified?
A Instructors are qualified 1
through the completion of the re-
Miss Schultz thinks we’re still dreamy-eyed about the sp^uve instructor training courses
Germans. She says that our German enemies “have succeed- conducted by representatives of the
ed in camouflaging the real facts and forces which led to national organization. Appoint-
the second World war,” und is convinced that they already menu are for one year, and cer-
have started work on World War III. ^ *y"2
She furnishes disquietmgly convincing proof that as appointed a nrst aid instructor,
far back as October 1940 the German general staff, fore- pI0Vldcd h„ Ls a K,Hduaic of a
seeing the possibility of failure, was making plans to con- recognized medical college with the
vert defeat into victory, exactly as it did—and Miss Schultz degree of doctor of medicine, and
makes this clear, too-^-in 1919. * ll> Kood professional standing.
,Mi>s Schultz believes that these prepiirat ions for the ,s ll,r |,“rp<”’r °r thr
next war will meet with the cooperation of most of the Ger-
man (M.pulacty that “Nazism "ill retain a great appeal '"i
Iht Germans, even in defeat.99 Hence, at the first si^n of j clue mg home accidents. whidi nn-
weakness on our part, she is convinced, they will try it
again. “Weakness” she calls appeasement, nonsensical talk
ahout the “good Germany," suggestions that our main en-
emy is Japan, and any indication of disunity among the
united nations.
“To be fooled once is tragic," v riles Miss Schultz,
br fooled twice is unforgivable.” i hat makes sense.
By Ernest Foster
United Press Correspondent
Sunday, March 19, 1933
j W. J. Flanigan Is
Operating Lounge
W. J. Flanigan of EH Reno has
taken over operation of the Lounge',
I restaurant located at 209 South'
I Rock Island avenue, it was an-
( nounceci Saturday by E. W.
IfOLLYWOOD, Mar 18 —(U.R)— Buddy" Williams, proprietor.
A giant of a man, 280 pounds! Flal,l8an. who now is makjng
and stretching skyward six feet!hls llome in E3 Reno. Is the son
and an inch. Lloyd Darrell chuck- j of Mrs- W. Flanigan. 914 South
led until his tummy vibrated as he 1 Ba,lter avenue, and has had exten-
watshed Pat O’Brien and Chester sive experience in hotel inanage-
Morris laboriously operating a pile- mcnt and accounting,
buck saw under water. He has been with the South
Manning other saws to cut mas- 3t‘a club at the Royal Hawaiian
sive piles to water level were other ! hotel and with the Alexander
actors. Tom Tully, Matt McHugh, Young hotel in Honolulu. He also
Frank Scully and Dick Talmadge., has been connected with the
When McHugh took his hands I Queen's Park hotel in Trinidad,
from beneath the water and spat British West Indies; the Escam-
on them to get a better grip. Dar- 1 b«on hotel. San Juan, Porto Rico;
rell fairly went into convulsions, i and with Horwath and Horwath.
national hotel accountants at Los
Angeles. Calif.
Hiccoughing Bombardier
Gives Crew 'Heebies'
Kcliind (lie Scenes
In Washington
The Voice Of
Road Safety
Kr«l Cross program in lionir ami
farm nreidriil prevention?
A. This program is aimed at re-
RY I’ETER EIlbON
NEA SUIT 4 <>rrr-|Mni(irnt
Notes from I’atrulmcn’H
Big Brown Books
“As fine a pilebuck crew as I ever
saw,” he commented.
Darrell, for 21 years a real pile-
buck, is Acting as technical ad-
ciser on ' Pilebuck" for Columbia
studios. A pilebuck. Darrell ex-
plained. is 10 percent rough car-
penter. heavy framer, rigger, spik-
er and burner. | CINCINNATI. Mar. 18—(U.B—Hic-
“The other 90 percent.” he con-) COUK*ls w'ere the queerest experience
tinued, "is Just plain mule, with! °* Sergeant William Franz during
time out for a little two-fisted jllls 25 combat missions over Europe,
drinking. In the shipyards we're j *lf’ sa'd w'hile home on furlough,
the guys who first drive the piles.' "While flying in the Shady La-
then saw them to the right height Idy" bc said, "we were right over
| then spike the planks across them.!the target when suddenly a loud hic-
bulld the frames for the ways and co«gh sounded over the airplane’s
do what burning is necessary with! interphone and it continued.”
ncetylene torches. It was the bombardier, who was
“When wc get the gunrd rail! Just about to unload his “eggs” on
up the shipbuilders take on from 1 * German-held town,
there.” I The embarrassed bombardier
He turned his attention to the i spluttered. "This is a helluva time
actors. and place to get the hiccoughs!”
“Take O’Brien there. If he wasn't j But the bombs were dropped.
.in actor. X could make a pilebuck ; -------
a month,” Darrell;
"To
V-Mail Always Gets There
fPHKKE in a real danger that overseas mail may lie rat
inned. Wi .nr >cmlnip I.ihhi.oimi lcttoi n week !>• <>ur I mv>|
men oil the fighting fronts and simply haven't enough carifo plasma or serum albumin. It Is one
space for this. Very often there has to be a choice between Iof l!lc i»iaerst contiolled under-
imally account for about one-third
of all accident fatalities, and farm
accidents where the late also is
high
(). What is the Red Cross III.mil
ilonor project?
A It Is a project through which
I lie Red Cross is procuring blood I
lor the armed forces at the re- |
| quest of Hie army and navy. It is
I the only agency tliroiigh wlrlcli :
II lie people of tills ,country may
give tlieir blood to the army and |
lor tlic production of dried
IfOV.’Ann HUGHES, III. movie producer auJ globe girdler, lias f OKLAHOMA CITY. Mur. 18-
ttnd out what the ...... i, * * Upeolil)—In sutamlttlnc a ic-
on the three eiglit-enginerl super-cargo planes which he and Henry I port of the past year’s success of
J. Kt.isci wcie gi\en an $111,000,000 contract 1o build 18 mofitlis ago, * tile state's traffic safety program
practically over the dead bodies of live Army Air to the national safety council this
l om . high command, who would have no part of it. week. Commissioner J. M
I'iisi of tire Kaisci-Hughes planes was to bc coin-
Signhanger Shortage
Speeds Up Campaign
pletcd last December, the other two by this coming
May. The KH-1 isn't completed yet and the other
two haven’t been begun.
In Hi. summer of 1042 this was the hottest issue
in Washington. Submarines were sinking ships
"hid.'ale. lloss man Kaiser blew in from the
w e t, ill nnializing Ihc need for more anti more cargo
pl .in-, demanding contracts. When he couldn t
,< i anything Iiom Army or Navy, War Production
lln'ird - lipped into the picture and asked tlie Dc-
teii c Plant Corporation to give him the contract
out of him in
said.
"Chester Morris is wiry—wc need
that type, too The little fellow. .
Matt McHugh, is just the guy to COLUMBUS. Mai. 18—(U.R>—Lieu-
work up high. Some folks have an tenant Governor Paul M. Herbert.
Idea uilebucks are all big men ' Republican candidate for governor.
They're wrong. Wc need all sizes.! Iau,,ched llLs campaign 10 dayv,
but we need 'em rugged” [earlier than he hud expected —
The scene being made was In a to the manpower shortage,
vitie. placed on'oklahomfl"highly | hu*e “hlpy.rd set that occupies ”erbert downtown office
two and a half stages at Columbia spacc and •** thc date for opening
• * « his campaign.
Gentry |
laid emphasis on the extra acti- ;
cupies I
_________ ____ ______ .. Il
liatrolmen during 1943
Pointing out a shortage of more j
than one-third in thc authorized |
Strength of the patrol by troop-,
eis entering military service, the tbc-slauShter look who perpetually | last signhanger was schedu'ed for
state .afety chief called the coun- ends up as ral1 «uy Hie he- j induction the next day.
cil's attention to the following: mannish movie heroes, but who; Herbert hurriedly pressed him
1 Rescue work in the two un- usually steals the show doing It. I Into service to hang a large sign on
LADDIE BRACKEN is the little j Ten days belorc the deadline, how-
^ fellow with the Icad-me-to- er hr was informed that thc city's
i l.ballV gnt
sfiidiiuf hairs of mail or ulasma It is unfair for us to force I lak'"K' 1,1 medical history, requlr-I ll"' K'(' Corporation hus a letter from
seiianiK bays ox mall or plasma. It is uman lor us to loru appi-oxhnatcly loaooo volun- Wf L c»> *"»»«■«» Uwiald M Nelson saying that he has asked (he Do-
th is choice oil the United States postal service. te£r donors each week and . total I !l"Vorpm-auen^to cancel that contract on the strength of a
The solution to this important problem IS ail easy one. mori ...... pU)U |n ' ...............•' of o.ginccr.s and their mid-January than $14.000 loot.
precedented floods in Eastern Okla- Paramount has always found :.
home In May | sP°l somewhere In a picture for
2. Quick apprehension of the | Eddie They've decked him out
Hulbert and Broken Arrow bank twicc as a sa‘lor- o'1-1' they made
robbers and the recovery of more I “ beachcomber out of him. an-
other time they ran him on as a
Use V-mail. Forty-nine letters sent the V-mail way occupy j 1944 l“‘“ 1 1 Aircrufl Production Hoard. I 3. Quelling » rebellion of more ban,c c,erk- Then he skipped over
the same sDacc as one letter sent in thc ordinary wav Ff U ivh.i i. .hr ......r,., ...PlT"" " ,hc Kn'1 hi,s bot" ,ou*h ri«ht from beginning, than 400 convicts In Oklahoma 110 clnm dl«slng. later Played ’a
.1 !.':::: .r:r?z........... ^
fool wing* pi end dri*’gi.<'d to carry tio tons of cargo had never been
la.ill la-lore, ;:nd wowlen construction turned out to bc heavier than
' 1 hn ii i;>|. ulali'd, llius lessening lire potential load carrying power
you haven’t lieeii availing: yourself of this convenience, it donat,n* i»i.mmi for the army and
is time to start. If you don’t know how to use it, ask alrout navy?
it in your |K»stoflice where you also can yet V-mail paper.
There is no mystery about it. It is simple. Furthermore,
V-mail letters always reach their destination. Letters mail-
ed jn any other way are far less certain. More than 2(M),-
000,000 V-mail letters have been delivered and not one has
been lost!
We all know that letters trom home are the Ri'eatest
comfort that the men have. We cannot risk cheating them
out of any part of the happiness they net in this way. It
is patriotic to u»e V-mail.
Over 100,000 miners are on strike in England. There
are some Americans customs the British really shouldn’t
adopt.
Politicians who go from side to side don’t make much
speed forward.
Q. lx 1.1.m.iI donated to lire Iterl
C'roMi available to civilians?
A Yes. Thc needs of the army
and navy must come first, but ar-
rangements have been made to re-
lease plasma to the Red Cross for
civilian use when needed In dis-
asters.
U- Is l.li.ud lurnisiird by Red
Cross hi.»«l donors ever sold?
A No All blood procured by the
Ih'cl Cross blood donors service Is
delivered immediately to processing
laboratories where It becomes tire
property or the army and navy.
4J. Him many Red Cross blood
donor centers are there and where
are they lo< a ted?
A As of January 1944. there are
35 blood donor centers loru ted In
the folkmhig cities: Atlanta, Bal-
timore. Boston. Brooklyn. Buffalo,
Chicngo, Cincinnati. Cleveland. Col-
umbus. Dallas, Denver. Detroit, Fort
Worth. Harrisburg,Hartford,Indian-
j a polls. Kansas City, Los Angeles.
Mrs. II. h. Harrison, president of the local Veterans Diuisvllie. Milwaukee, Minneapolis,
of Foreign Wars auxiliary, was elected department trea- ■Nrw o,|pan*. New York, Oakland,
surer during a department council meeting in Anudarko j plul,,d,’lpbla Pittsburgh. Portland,
yeftterdav. Rochester, Sad Antonio, S.ui Diego,
Q"~ w *— BchnccUdy. St.
Down Memory Lane
Mar. 19. 19.11
Designation of the El Keno highsehool bantl as an
official representative of the Oklahoma Elks association to
the national convention in Kansas City wer effected here
yesterday at a meeting of state association directors, ex-
alted ruler and secretaries of the various lodges.
A. Donors m;.k. appointments in
advance by railing one of the
Red Cross blood donor centers or
cooperating chapters visited by a
mobile unit. AX the time of their
4. Fighting Ouachita national for- 1
est fire.
5. Policing military air accidents
and rescue work.
6. Providing record breaking num-
ber of escorts for military convoys
and equipment required by war
industries.
7. Providing transportation for
a shipyard
and even portrayed
wolker
But success after all these years
thc front of his offices
his campaign.
-la lurching
Hospital Notes
George L. Segress, Oklahoma
City, mjderwcjit a minor operation
Saturday morning in the El Iteivo
sanitarium. ’
Shirley Olllllun. daughter ot Mr
W/Ol;K "ii Hit- first model is still going on. Four of tire WPB cngi-
•wei who inspected the project urc reported to have recommended
apirointmenta they visit the blood I ‘"nlinuahon without condemning Ihc plane, while two were in doubt,
donor center or cooperating chan- Tl,c ,l,at tun bo hoped for i;. completion of the first wooden
ter to make the donations. | tJ‘1 ‘* b- I model.
I KMluetion of new model super-cargo planes, while huge In com- | lcc°rd number of emergency cases.
P«*risen lo pre-war quantity standards, is still subject to serious delay, i delivery of serums to hospitals, con-
aceordiug lo the Senate Truman Committee’s third annual report on verting patrol cars into ambulances
aircraft Full credit is given to Army and Navy for building up their j to reach hospitals with sick and
yiiomi miles of transport route, wdhout which successful operations (injured when other transportation
nndd mil have been carried out at Guadalcanal, New Guinea, North | was unavailable.
Alt lea, Burma and over Hie hump to China.
It is pointed out, however, that more transport work has been done
with Army versions of the 10-yrnr-old Douglas DC-3—thc work-
horse of the air—than with all other types of cargo and transport
planes put together. And while thousands of these planes have been
built, even tlieir production is not up to original schedule.
Mr. h 1 id Mr*. John C. DcLanu, Mrs. John L. Funk und
.Ichse W. Ilaydon returned today from u 1-day tour taken bv
a goodwill party of about ltK) Oklahomans to Mexico.
San Francisco,
Louis. St Paul and
D C
Washington,
Miss Hazel Hoyt of Bciitonville, Ark., arrived tuduv
to spend a two-week vacation with her parent a, Mr. anil
Mrs. C. B. Hoyt, 612 West London street.
rJm U"^ ^rrt' Floyd Alexander and daughter, Jeuiinine,
°* Dwllas. Tex., were gueats over the week-end in the home
of Mr. Alexander’s father, I. W .Alexander. 119 South
Bolterts avenue.
Mrs, Sum Hulbert entertained yesterday at a well
appointed 1 ock dinner celebrating the birthday anni-
versary of Mt. Huibert at their home, 711 Sunset drive.
Sorghum Authority
To (live Assisthiut
BRISTOW, Mar 18 (U.RI Thc
assistance of John B Sieglincr. grain
sorghum authority, hat, been asked
by Bristow farmers and business
men who want Information
sorghum.
Slegliner now is stationed at Ok-
lahoma A and M college. He has
spent more than 25 years Improv-
ing grain sorghums In Oklahoma
Air Cadets Try
Anti-Sleep Fills
ed thc time an excellent oppor-
tunity to train thc young pilots in
the use of thc benzedrine tablets.
Highlights of the safety pro-
gram included 24 percent reduction
in fatalities. 24 percent reduction
in all types of traffic accident,
21 percent reduction In number of
persons Injured, and 25 percent
reduction in the number of pro-
perty damage accidents over the
: previous year. The number of fatal-
! itie6, 265. was the lowest for any
ha.s finally taken up a homestead- and Mrs. C. D. Oilman. 209 North
ing claim on the Bracken doorstep. Evan* avenue, underwent a minor
Now nes a millionaire. Just tern- operation Friday In thc Catto hot>-
porarily, of course, during the film- piu;
ing of "Bring On the Olrls." but c. W. Davis. El Reno, who en-
for a little guy who's been on the tered thc Catto hospital Mar. 9.
wrong side of the tracks In so underwent a major operation there
many movies, it's quite a treat to Friday.
be toting thc silver spoon around. Clarence Swarts. Peabody. Ka*i..
even If Its only on celluloid. who entered thc El Reno sanl-
Not only Is Eddie wealthy in his urium Mur. 14 for medical treat-
latest picture, lie's filthy rich, so ment. was dismissed Friday,
rich, in fact, that he never knows William Morrison. 312 North
whether a girl is after his love Macomb avenue, who entered the
°r..J1*S lnonev El Reno sanitarium Mar. 15 for
It could only happen because medical treatment, returned Satur-
I m a comedian,” Eddie explained, day to his home.
"II I were playing anything but
Thc field flight surgeon approved 1 ypar since 1923. and 83 less than
*■--*- — 1 1942
their use
The class had fallen behind ini Accidents totaled 11.365 conr-
its training program due to bad Pared to 15.985 in 1942; lujured
weather, field officials reported.! 3312, compared to 4.419; property
Many instructors and students were i damage accidents 8,919. compared
‘to 11.846
ALTUS Mar. i8 — <U.H>— Benze-
drine anti-sleep pills, the nos-
trums college students sometime,
use the night before final exams
much to tire alarm of campus
deans and doctors, come In' handv *n I*1® **r ^ hours a day during
when army flying cadets fall bo- th® Pc,'lod pa^°' m,'overrd 232 stolen
hind in tire training Officers said thc benzedrine tab-1 motor vehicles during the year.
The pills were used recently bv are 1 and w111 uspd fro- j * * *
an entire r lass ol flight students fP*®,ltly wllc» the men attain com- > 1 c BOWMAN. 36-year-old. well-
at the Alt us army air Held dur- bat fating* to keep their senses " * to-do farmer, was given a
sharp during long, tedious flights I two-year prison sentence in Ttll-
over hostile territory. ! nran county district court at Fred-
- ! crick for the death of a 39-ycar-
lng an Intensive four-day train-
ing period, the public relations
office has announced.
Although the flying officers and
cadets were getting the proper
amount of sleep during the period,
thc training department consider-
Private Brewer Abroad
Mrs. E. C. York of Denison. Tex.,1 old Ardmore man, killed when Bow
Is here vjslting Mrs. Audry Nun-1 mnn drovp his car into a truck
1 rally and Mrs. Anna Downey,1 OMd ot cotton pickers last Sep-
tember.
j Patrolmen charged Bowman was
drunk and was speeding on thc
W'rong side of the highway.
comedy roles I'd have been typed
long ago. As it Is now, I'm liable
to bc the inmate of a prison In
one picture und the warden In
thc next.”
Tills role of a slap-happy young
millionaire has Eddie a bit wor-
ried
'Me, I can play ordinary guys
because I've always been one and
missed many a meal. But I’ve
never even been close" to a million-
aire like this bird in the picture
and I'm not sure Just how to han-
dle It.'
Tire difficulties begin in “Too
Many Girls" when Eddie decides
to Join thc navy and keep his
identity secret. Then, figures
Sally’s Sallies
BUS RESURRECTED
BURLINGTON. Vt. -iU.»- The
Burlington Transit company cer-
tainly Is feeling the hardships of
war, Thc firm has hauled out of
dead storage a 14-year-old bus
(hat already has done more than
1,000,000 miles duty.
Bracken, people will like Bracken
for Bracken aird not Bracken’s
bank roll. His lawyers Insist on
sending Sonny Tufts along to take
care of him. Even Tufts can’t
keep Eddie out ol trouble, especially
the kind displayed by Veronica
Lake, and from then on Rracken
sinks deeper and deeper iuto Ills
own complications.
By Scats
221't South Bickford avenue.
I tv Dave Hrr*rr
' *9*1 Km>| 1 til .i#» i.mJiielt Ilk . WimU i^kts •(«#•>«•!
on
Mittn Virginia Barnard, 614
look and Learn
Hoff Bvenue, enter- ~
tained today with a bridge parly honorintc Mins Irene
Deskina oF Ardmore.
U wail to celebrate the 13th birthday anniversary of
her son, Billy, that Mrs. John S|*encer, 712 South Hadden
uvetiue, entertained with u birthday dinner yesterday.
• Baker H. Melone of Tulsa is at home here with bis
brother, Lloyd I*. Melone, while he is temiarrarily uuaueial-
ed With the local office of Melone, Porter, •Melone und
Melone, attorneys.
Mi. and Mrs. t. M. Brady, 309 South Uoberts avenue
returned yeaterday from a few daya’ visit with their son,’
C iarence Brady, in Kansas City. Mo., and other relatives in
Caldwell, Kan.
t. When docs Hells*-'s comet ap-
pear?
2. What Is the flower meaning |
of tin* Illy-of-tire-valley?
3. For what are the Navajo In-
dians noted?
4. Who was the dlsuiple that
Jesus predicted would deny him
thrlcc before the cock crew?
5. Wline Is Point Burrow locat- j
ed?
ANMVLKs
I Every 7«.g years; Us last ap-
pearance was In April 1910.
2. “Return of happiness."
3. For thc beautiful blankets
and sllverwork.
4. St Peter.
6. At the northern tip ol Aiaaku.
lesson in English
WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: Do
| not say, “I see it clearly from
I vour viewpoint." "From your |iolnt
| of view" Is preferable.
OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED;
I Champion. Pronounce chain-pl-un,
j I as In 14, three syllables.
, OFTEN MISSPELLED: Asphyxia
Observe the phyx, pronounced fix.
SYNONYMS: Endless, everlast-
ing. incessant, Interminable, cease-
less, continuous
WORD STUDY: “Use a word
three times and it is yours." Let
us Increase our vocabulary by
mastering one word each day. To-
day's word: INEBRIATE (noun);
a habitual drunkard. “He was an
inebriate of the slums."
Young man, this photography light meter show* your buttons
are not shining brightly enough!”
'MYTH' DECRIED
CHICAOO — (U.RI—- Joseph A.
j Brandt, director of the University
I of Chicago Press said. “The Amcr-
j lean mind Is doomed to c^UInued
I adolescence unless educator* ' give'
up tlic 'myth' that the nation's
average mentality Is at the 12-year-
old level."
1.
1644, (Mni ft
'Elmer and I agree perfectly He thinks there's nothing too
---T gooil fpr me"
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Dyer, Ray J. The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 53, No. 16, Ed. 1 Sunday, March 19, 1944, newspaper, March 19, 1944; El Reno, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc921940/m1/4/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.