The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 64, No. 136, Ed. 1 Sunday, August 7, 1955 Page: 4 of 10
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:
1
Four
The El Reno (Okie.) Daily Tribune
Sunday, August 7, 1955
The El Reno Daily Tribune
A Blae Ribbon Newspaper Serving A Blue Ribbon Community
taued daily except Saturday from 201 North Rock Island Avenue
and entered as second-class mall matter under the act of March 3, 1879
RAY J. DYER
Editor and Publisher
DEAN WARD • LEO D. WARD
Business Manager Managing Editor
HARRY SCHROEDER
Circulation and Office Manager
MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Associated Press is entitled exclusively to the use for republlratlon
of all the local news printed in this newspaper, as well as all OP) newt
dispatches.
MEMBER
OKLAHOMA PRESS
ASSOCIATION
m
MEMBER
|£> SOUTHERN NEWSPAPER
PUBLISHERS ASSN
lyHY Mr. Linzee. Even in 1920?
Ain the proud possessor of a
booklet, contents compiled and
typed by Mr. E. H. Linzee, who
arrived in Oklahoma in June
1899 and continued to make his
home in the state the rest of his
life. In 1940 he was prompted to
put together some of his recol-
DAILY SUBSCRIPTION
BY CARRIER
One week----------
One Month_________
One Year_____________
Elsewhere In State-
RATES BY MAIL IN CANADIAN ANE
ADJOINING COUNTIES
______$ .25 Three months--------$1.75
_____$ 1.10 Six Months_______________$3.50
______$11.00 One Year______________$C.5Q
One Year____$8.50-Out of State----$11.00
Including Sales Tax
lections of the early days and j it, that he had, you didn't worry
while the book couldn't be con- , about using back alleys or brass
knuckles when the game got that
far down into the deck.
Wyatt was using a back alley
Sunday, August 7, 1955
Thus did Noah; according to all that God commanded him, so did he.
—Gen. 6:22. God is talking to us all the time, the still small voice is
not always heard, but it is always right. The Kingdom of heaven is
within us.
Mr. Eyebrows in Eclipse
JOHN L. LEWIS, boss of the United Mine Workers, is almost
" the forgotten man of the nation’s labor front. It’s been
years since he tied the country in knots with a big coal strike.
Some like to ascribe his uncharacteristic quiet to Lewis’
advancing age. But the evidence seems to point elsewhere.
For some years now the coal industry has been sick. Conse-
quently the union's bargaining position has not been strong.
Credit Lewis with fully recognizing the industry’s plight,
and working closely with coal operators to bring about im-
provement. Last year soft coal output was more than 200
million tons below the record high of 630,623,000 in 1947.
This year things are slightly better, and there is slender prom-
ise of still further upward strides.
Overseas shipments of coal have doubled. The utilities and
the booming steel mills are using more coal. With many signs
pointing to general gains in the economy, these demands
should go on rising.
DUT the industry is far from out of the woods. The industry
believes it must hit 500 million tons of output a year
before it can approach minimum stability. And some of the
figures are still discouraging.
For instance, retail use of coal this year is down 18 percent
from last year, and overall industrial use is off 6 percent. The
railroads, always a backbone customer in the old days, are
today so heavily dieselized that their coal requirements are , _
very low I w asked about ,hc Texas
The industry's sickness has driven many producers out of
the field. In the last five years, more than a third of t he na-
tion’s active mines have closed down.
Of those remaining, many have merged and have made
heavy investments in new machinery to reduce operating
costs. The so-called captive mines—owned by the steel com-
panies—have added relatively to their already substantial
strength.
ALL this has helped the industry to arrest a slide that be-
gan when oil and gas first made heavy inroads into the
use of coal. The competition goes on, but coal men are fight-
ing to hold a place of consequence in the nation’s economy.
The industry's trends have gravely hurt employment in
the field. Once.around 700,000 in soft coal, it is now down to
250,000. And of the noncaptive mines, nonunion labor ac-
counts for 30 to 40 percent of production.
Still, the biggest operators are getting better returns, and
Lewis may feel the time is ripe for the UMW to ask for more
money. Workers in other industries have had three pay boosts
since the miners last got one, although the miners' average
hourly wage continues to top all other major work groups
sidered to have great ljterary
merit the subject matter isn't to
be sneezed at by writers, read-
ers or critics.
I quote from his chapter on
Texas Rangers without fear of
my readers being bored at quot-
es. It is too good to miss and the
book I won't lend. Mr. Linzee
says “recently I boarded a Santa
Fe train just behind a tall Texan
who was wearing civilian clothes
and a ten gallon Stetson. In the
lounge car we got into conversa-
tion and it came out that he was
a Lieutenant Colonel in the U. S.
Army, stationed at San Antonio
and was then on some special
duty. II also developed that he
had been a captain in the Texas
Rangers, and from some re-
marks he made I located him as
the Captain of Rangers, who,
with one other ranger cleaned
up Borgcr, Texas, one of the
toughest and most vicious of
boom oil towns.
rTHE Governor of Texas was
appealed to for relief and
within a few days a Ranger Cap-
tain with one man appeared in
Borger and reported to the citi-
zen's committee who asked
“where are your men?” The
captain replied “here we are and
if more are needed we’ll send
for them." In a short time, the
tough element had been cleaned
out without a gun being drawn
or a shot fired, resulting in a
town made safe for people to live
and do business in, entirely on
the reputation of the Texas Ran-
R^lWho Rides With Wyatt
_PUI'H«UI hr NW, Copyr.gH* ttM, 1955 Sf Will H«W)1 Uu4 b, emngtnwat »1A tmlo* H«j«, Im.'
“ ' A
XXII . | nervous leaders a mite, “Pull in
CONTRARY to what he'd told I them hosses!”
Lilly, his first thought after leav- “We don’t hold up for anybody!”
ing her place wasn't for killing [ Paul yelled.
Johnny Ringo but for keeping * * *
Wyatt Earp alive. WYATT had told him, above all,
He was never the one to horse to see that the outlaws got the
himself any about the romance or tna*l sack whenever they might
other nonsense connected with be- JumP his run, whether they asked
ing a famous peace officer. It took f°r it or not. Past that, he'd said
hard, dirty work to hold it. When to use his own judgment. Bob
you'd put the years into learning | Paul was using that judgment now.
Along with his shotgun. The old
double was up and blasting.
One of the bandits was hit, for
now. The one that ran along be-
sure. But Ringo and the other one
were letting drive w’ith their sad-
dleguns. The kid’s first snap drilled
hind the Allen Street store build- Phl1? • heart-center. In the mid-
ings on the south side. He was die of laymg h.s whip to the wheel-
using it to get down to Fifth and *rs- B,ud ,spu" up °ff \he box' fel1
t head first, his body hanging up
across the trace chains.
Bob Paul managed to grab up
the lines.
Ringo and his two pals got their
mounts free of the lunge of the
i coach in time to watch it rattle by,
top the grade, go lurching out of
I sight down the far side. And in
t time, too, to throw a scatter of wild
| shots after it. It was only a little
added fact that two of those shots
smashed into the belly of a boot
passenger named Peter Roerig,
killing him deader than last year’s
elections. It was only another two-
bit addition that in the boot with
Roerig rode $80,000 in ready-sacked
bullion.
The main thing was that there
had been a U. S. mail sack be-
tween Bob Paul's boots, and that
somebody had had the bad sense
at last to try to interfere with its
legal delivery.
The high fence of the federal law
had been crawled over and Johnny
Ringo had snagged the seal of his
Levis.
(To Be Continued)
rangers at this time the captain
replied “the rangers have been
an institution ever since there
has been a Texas. They protect-
ed the early pioneers by whip-
ping the Indians who would raid
the ranches and settlers; then
whipped the bands of outlaws,
train robbers and cattle rustlers
that infested the stale: but they
couldn’t whip politics so that now
a once noble and useful institu-
tion has deteriorated into a poli-
tical football.”
As an added note of my own I
wonder where they went from
there.
over to Toughnut and the telegraph
office without he was bushwhacked
on the way.
What he did when he got there
was to hunch in out of the wind
and ask Jake Shagrew about his
Missus and the new baby boy.
After that, he turned to Jake and
put in a terse, 10-word telegraph
order of his own—for a pair of
brass knuckles from Dodge City:
J. E Holliday
Dodge City, Kans.
Doc, eould use two good depu-
ties. Bring Morg. No hurry. ,
-Wyatt.
The Sulphur Springs bunch got
wind of Wyatt’s disappearance the
day after he left. Right off, they
set out their lookouts, north and
south of town, watching for him
to come back by either stage or
saddle.
Accordingly, the arrival of the
regular Friday stage run from
Benson was covered blanket-close.
Wyatt, you knew. You bet him
ease out and down, not needing
to figure his ten’s worth. The sec-
ond man out made you blink your
eyes and look again to make sure
the first one had been Wyatt. Then,
if you’d thought Virgil looked like
his brother, you stood to refigure
right now in favor of this new one.
In any light less than full day and
from more than 20 feet off, he was
the spit-image twin of Wyatt.
This one had to be Morgan Earp,
and a gunhand as clearly worth
10 ordinary men as was ever broth-
er Wyatt.
Aggie Playgoers
To Loose Hampton
Short Stories
About Home Folks
Mrs. R. F. Jones. 112 South Ma-
comb and her houseguests Mrs.
J L. Evans and Mr. and Mrs.
Chester DeCuir and daughter,
Diane ol Monroe, La., and Mrs.
The third man out stopped you Robert C. Wolfe and son, David of
cold. You knew you’d never seen Stillwater spent Friday at Roman
him and didn't know him from Nose park near Watonga.
the eighth jack down in a 12-mule , „ “
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Headley of
He was frock-coated and pros- ^and Springs, lulsa county, are
perous dressed, like the Earps. | giiests of his brother and sister-in-
He wore the gambler's wide black aw‘ and Mrs. Harry W. Head-
hat, shoestring tie and pin-stripe, ley' 533 South 11 rances.
pegtop pants, the same as his
friends.
You would never guess to look i
at him that he was a gentleman-'
born, to one of the finest of the old
Confederate families, from clear
A former EUS student who has
distinguished himself in the far-
It could be that front pages will blossom with Lewis’s flan>; lu l,ls 01 actinf; arl and ho‘
* — Lil m •■till l.ti.im Mlrln
down in Valdosta, Ga.; or that he
was a graduate of one of the Old
South’s best-known colleges: or
that he honorably held one of those
Bachelor of Science degrees in den-
tal surgery, and had long been li-
Midshipman First Class Charles
Franklin Coker arrived Friday
morning for a visit with his par-
j ents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Coker,
' 147 North Donald. He has just re-
turned from a cruise to England
and Spain. Coker will return to
Annapolis, Md., Sept. 3 to resume
his duties at the U. S. Naval aca-
demy.
name once again in the next few months, as he presents fresh
great strike.
For a major coal stoppage at this stage would almost cer-
tainly speed the conversion of more factories and homes to
tel management, will leave Okla- censed to practice that profession,
homa A and M college theater That last one off the Benson
stage was Doc Holliday.
lion of student activities advisor * * *
at Washington State college, l’ull- THE stage that went back up
man. Wash. to Benson Wednesday nights took
, Craig Hampton, son of Mrs Glen along the Contention’s bullion in
otnci tuels. And Lewis knows there has already been too much Morse, 701 South Rock Island, is place of the payroll cash that came
Of that for his industry's good. co-founder of the Town and Gown down on the morning runs. Curly
- theater group at A. and M., which had it on inside authority that that
They should make a piggy bank that will squeal every time has presented a total of it> plays Wednesday’s shipment of bar sil-
mom or dad shake some of junior’s money out. during the past four years. ver would go better than $50,000
- “ Beside staring in many of the He handpicked Ringo to run the
If the ways of some wives were mended, so would hubby's >)lu-vs Hampton’s talents were era- show because the kid had the best
socks and shirts be. " ployed in directing, designing and 1 reason for getting back at Wyatt.
art work in connection with the When they jumped the stage just
productions. short of the top of Six Mile Grade,
He is a graduate of Kansas uni- with the teams pulling slow enough
versity anil a native of El Reno. He 1 to make it look easy for one ama-
went to A. and M. in 1950 as as- teur, let alone seven professionals,
sistant director of the new Student Ringo thought he had it made.
Union building. I “Tht^wdown that mail sack!”
- ; yelled Ringo.
Mrs. A. J. Drake of Agra, Lin- “She’s throwed," said Bob Paul,
coin county, is visiting in the home Ringo caught it, hooked its lock-
of her son-in-law and daughter, | chain around his saddle-horn.
Mr and Mrs. Don Fcddersen, 220 “Where’s the bullion?” he barked.
West Wade. Then, as Philpot eased off on the
Mr and Mrs. P. C. Hanks and
children, Kathryn, Richard, Peter
and Robert of Vicksburg, Miss.,
and Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Haynes
and son, Dwight of Oklahoma City i
arc guests in the home of Mr. and|
Mrs. E. C. Wilson. 1122 Westj
Watts. Mr. Hanks is the brother of
Mrs. Wilson and Mrs. Haynes is
the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wil-i
son. The Hanks family will also
visit with his brother-in-law and
sister, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Cord-
well, northwest of El Reno.
Boy Scouts In
370 Get Badges
A court of honor was held Fri-
day evening on the First Christian
church lawn for Boy Scout Troop
370, with various advancement
badges going to the Scouts, and
installation of Troop officers.
Highlight of the evening was
presentation to the troop of an
American flag which had flown
over the nation’s capitol in Wash-
ington. The Clara Barton circle No.
11, Ladies of the Grand Army of
the Republic, made the presenta-
tion.
Badges Awarded
New Tenderfoot Scouts ‘in Troop
370 to receive badges were Marvin
Nelson and Robert Jackson.
Second class badges went to
Eddie O’Blenness, Kendall Barnes,
Ronnie Seikel and Jerry Overhol-
ser.
First class badges were present-
ed to Jack Mosher and Larry Dir-
icksen.
Jack Mosher earned a merit
badge for home repairs, and Larry
Diricksen was awarded a badge
for home citizenship.
Officers Installed
New officers given badges of of-
fice at their installation were Carl
Kickingbird, assistant scoutmas-
ter; Jerry Van Zante, junior assist-
ant scoutmaster; Buddy Miles,
senior patrol leader: Jack Mosher,
Wayne Abies and Eddie O’Blen-
ness, patrol leaders; and Eddie
Blake, Lloyd Foutz and Ronnie
Seikel, assistant patrol leaders.
Larry Diricksen was installed as
troop scribe, and Kendall Barnes
received the quartermaster badge.
Following the ceremony, the
Scouts demonstrated for their par-
ents various arts of knot-tying,
compass reading and other Scout
lore.
Bryan Blake
Rites Monday
Funeral services will be held at
4 p. m. Monday at Guardian fu-
neral home in Oklahoma City for
Bryan Blake, brother of Miss Mar-
ian Blake. 301 North Rock Island.
Rev. William L. Alexander, First
Christian church minister there,
will be in charge. '
Graveside services will be held
at the El Reno cemetery between
5:30 and 6 p. m. Monday.
Mr. Blake died Friday night at
his home at 2701 North Harvey,
after being ill since May.
Survivors in addition to the El
Reno woman are his wife, Mrs.
Maude M. Blake of the home, and
a brother, Bardwell Blake of Okla-
homa City. He was also a brother
of the late Ancel Blake.
Mr. Blake was born in Coldwater,
Kan., June 11, 1890, and moved to
El Reno in infancy with his parents,
the late Mr. and Mrs. C. O. Blake.
His father was attorney for the
Rock Island railroad for Oklahoma.
He moved to Oklahoma City in
1928. He is a member of the First,
Christian church, a member of the
Shrine and of the Real Estate
Board of Oklahoma. He was head
of the real estate department of
the Home State Life Insurance
company.
Mr. Breger
By Dave Breger
(of* 1*7'V Kimj, ImuKt S)nJ-.jir, In. . Ww'lJ iq;hi* routed
“It’s not that I mind your long lunch periods—but using I
them to work for our competitor ..
Lesson in English
WORDS OFTEN MISUSED:
Avoid the expression "just recent-
ly.” Since "recently” means not
long ago, a short time past, the
“just” is not needed.
OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED:
Khedive (former Turkish viceroy).
Pronounce ke-dev, first e as in
bet unstressed, second e as in
leave, accent second syllable.
OFTEN MISSPELLED: Naval
(pertaining to ships). Navel (de-
pression in abdomen).
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: LACRIMOSE; shed-
ding, or given to shedding, tears.
“Her lacrimose complaining be-
come intolerable to her husband.”
Mrs. Robert L. Waldo and sons, j ||
James and John of Shawnee and j )|
her mother, Mrs. Fritz Liehte and
granddaughter, Gay Vicent, both of
Bryan, Tex., were guests Saturday
in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Neill
B. Waldo, G04 South Barker.
“TORNADO" BOYD
WICHITA, Kan.—HPI—David Lynn
Boyd, born in a Wichita hospital
two weeks after his mother sur-
vived the death-dealing Udall
storm, has been nicknamed “Tor-
nado” by family friends.
FROM TIME TO TIME,
A number of you fellows have been
wanting a farm at low cost where you could make a living
and perhaps a little more. Listen to what this fellow says:
Dear Mr. Niyhswander:
Here is a description of our 122-
acre farm. The house has 4 rooms, partly re-decorated
ar.d painted, but is not modem. There is a windmill
and well of abundance of good soft water at back door.
We have a dairy barn with 4 stalls and a two-unit milker
installed which will go with the place. We also have
electric cream separator. Good poultry house and hay
barn with 95 bales oats hay. a few acres cane sown for
feed. We have some rented ground with corn and hegarl
that will go with place, about 5 acres cotton i very good)
large bolls already, 6 acres Black Diamond watermelons,
we are selling them every day. We have 8 Jersey milk
cows, 5 small calves, 1 yearling, 1 Jersey bull, 3 horses
and horse-drawn tools. A good stock pond besides a
creek running through the place. I should say about
25-30 acres in cultivation, mostly bottom, the rest is in
pasture, bermuda grass in bottom, native grass on up-
land, lots pecans and walnut trees, school at Wanette,
school bus by door. 3 4 mile to highway 39. Our price is
$5,750.00 for all or $4,600.00 for farm.
If you wish to try and sell it, you may. We are leav-
ing the state.
Yours Very Truly,
* »»
/---
Well That’s It and All We Know About It
OTHER FARMS
Nighswander Realty Company
•‘Dealers in Better Class Farms and City Property"
701 West Wade Street Phone 503
THERE IS A REASON
Kids are geting paid these days for picking raspberries—
anti having a tuinmyache thrown in for good measure.
If we all could do just as we please during summertime
think how little would be done.
Down Memory Lane
Aug. 7, 1935
DELEGATION from Canadian county will attend a meet-
ing in Tulsa Thursday to discuss the national flood con-
trol bill.
Annual election of officers of the El Reno American
Legion post 34 will be held during the regular meeting Thurs-
Canadian county has been allocated $3,645.56 for relief
expenditures the first half of August, Charles H. Tompkins,
county OERA administrator, announced today.
El Reno Mill defeated the Reformatory team 13 to 6 in a
commercial league softball contest played Tuesday afternoon
on the Rock Island diamond.
Alva with 109 degrees was the most sizzling point on the
weather map yesterday with Enid second at 105 and El Reno
third at 103 degrees.
Aug. i, 1945
JJEARING on Canadian county’s protest of the 19.951 percent
increase in real estate valuations for tax purposes has
been set for Aug. 22. Sam Hulbert, county assessor, who filed
the protest, was notified today.
El Reno highschool, through its department of diversified
occupation, will offer again this year a service to El Reno
employers and an opportunity for students needing part time
employment. The department under direction of C. L. McGill
assists employers in finding suitable student help and pro-
vides students thus employed with a course of instruction re- i
lated to the work they are doing.
Harry Kamp, former resident of El Reno, was a visitor
here Monday enroute from Kay City to Marlow. Kamp is with
the Petty Geophysical company.
Dale C. Byrd, son of Mr. and Mrs. VV. G. Byrd. Reforma-
tory circle, has been awarded a prize in a professional archi-!
tecture competition offered by General Motors. With a Har-
vard classmate, Robert Coolidge, Bvrd will receive a $5 000
award for the design of an automobile sales building for pas-1
senger cars only. '
Today Your Pharmacist, Floyd Birden,
Drops a Word About . . .
c
>
V
ELMER McCOLLUM
Elmer McCollum, chemist, was born In Rcdflelct,
Kansas in 1879. He received his science education
at Yale.
McCollum discovered Vitamin D in 1922. Often re-
ferred to as "The Sunshine Vitamin." this valuable
member of the vitamin family has become a house-
hold word throughout America.
BIRDEN’S PHARMACY
1U0 North Rock Island
Phone 377
(nY^UHJ* DOCTOR'S KNOWlfDGl IS IHl K I Y TO
HIAITH — BRING HIS t MSCMPTIQN TO US
DAIRY SALE
To settle the partnership of W. H. Gordon and Nltzel Bros.,
we will offer at Public Auction the following Cattle and Equip-
ment, on
Tuesday, August 16 at 11 a. m.
located 12 miles West of El Reno, Oklahoma, on Highway
66 to Carlisle Station, 2 miles South. 1 mile West. Or from Hinton
Junction 8 miles East on Highway 66, 3 miles South and 1 mile
West ♦
32 HEAD CHOICE HOLSTEIN CATTLE
This entire herd was tested by the local veterinarian on July
18, 1955, and was found to be negative in dilutions for Brucellosis
(Bangs disease) and also negative for Tuberculosis (TB). This
test was in accordance with state regulations for Grade A
production
Holstein Cow, 6 years, (Fresh by sale date) 6-gal.; Holstein Cow,
8 years. Fresh in Sept., 7 gal.; Holstein Cow, 8 years. Fresh in
Sept., 6 gal.; Holstein Cow, 8 years. Fresh sale date, 8 gal.;
2 Holstein Cows, 7 years. Fresh in Sept., 6 gal.; Holstein Cow, 3
years. Fresh Oct. 1st, 5 gal.; Holstein Cow 4 years. Fresh in Sept.,
4 gal.; Holstein Heifer, 2 years. Been fresh 60 days, 3 gal.; Hol-
stein Heifer, 2 years. Been fresh 60 days, 2!<>gal.; Guernsey Cow,
8 years, Fresh Sept. 1st, 5 gal.; Black Jersey Cow, 4 years, Fresh
in Sept., 5 gal.; Holstein Cow, 6 years. Fresh in Jan., 6 gal.;
Guernsey Cow, 5 years, Fresh in Sept., 6 gal.; Blue Roan Heifer,
Coming up 1st Calf, a dandy. Guernsey-Jersey Heifer, Coming up
1st Calf, Nice; 5 Holstein Heifers, 18 months old, Extra nice;
11 Holstein Heifers, 8 months. All CaJfhood vaccinated. These
cows all bred to Registered Bull from Abe Wllkerson’s herd.
FARM EQUIPMENT—"M" Farmall Tractor 1944 model, Good
condition, with new Super M changeover, good rubber; “H"
Farmall Tractor 1948 model, good rondition. new tires; 2 Inter-
national Cultivators; International Lister; 2 International 7-ft.
Power Mowers; International Side Delivery Rake, on rubber,
like new, Case Side Delivery Rake; New Holland Baler 50 model,
good rondition; Good Farm Wagon; 1949 AJlis-Chalmers Com-
bine, 5 ft., good; 8 ft Shaeffer One-Way, a good one; 8 ft.
International Tandem Disc; M and M Grain Drill, 16-8 Discs,
good condition; 3-16 M and M Moldboard Plow, extra good; 4
Section M and M Spring Tooth, a good one; Four-Wheel Farm
Wagon on rubber; Good Two-Wheel Trailer, 5x10 bed; Whet-
more Clipper Hammcrmill, good.
Milking Equipment, Saddle Horses, Farm Trucks, Chickens, Hay
and Feed and Miscellaneous Items.
Deep Dale Home Demonstration Club Will Serve Lunch
Regular Sale Terms
NITZEL and GORDON, Owners
AUCTIONEERS;
Col. Jim Johnson — Col. C. S. Deatheragr
Phone 365-M, El Reno Phone 2939, El Reno
(Members of the Oklahoma State Auctioneers Association)
f irst National Bank of Calumet, Clerk
AWNINGS
Air£8iiiul
Jones Furniture Has the Most Complete Awning
Selections in Canadian County . . . Why Pay More?
See Us for Free Estimates!
IN ADDITION TO OUR
AIR-O-BLIND AWNINGS
WE HAVE . ..
• Canvas Awnings
• Ray-O-Lite Spun
Glass Awnings
• Venetian Blinds
• We Replace Old
Faded and Torn
Canvas Awnings
TERMS ARRANGED IF YOU WISH
"WE GIVE AND REDEEM S * II GREEN STAMPS”
AWNINGS
JONES
113 N. Rock Island
i FURNITURE
COMPANY
Phone 1212
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. 64, No. 136, Ed. 1 Sunday, August 7, 1955, newspaper, August 7, 1955; El Reno, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc922751/m1/4/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.