The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 54, No. 50, Ed. 1 Friday, April 27, 1945 Page: 4 of 6
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:
Four
w ft** Mr tiunm.
The El Reno Daily Tribune
mv a. ms
MAN WARD
MwrtWH Mwm
The A—OlUATKi HUM to nehHMr entitled to the we of n-
p+ft~nnm or cU tko BMW dtogptohes credited to H or not eradlted by
i CM paper. UMI oMo to all toe local mv* thereto.
AO righto of publksotkma of apodal dtopadohm hereto also sre reserved.
Capitol
Notebook
By Howard Brisco
Associated Prow Correapnnrtent
AKUHOMA CITY. Apr. Il-lffi)
” Oklahoma's 30th two-ring lefts-
H Would Nike Saw Sum—
Frfdojr, April tt, U
CUJARCTTE5.
VOX
JNM) hep* mi
milt subscription
air cabbms
fib* Writ..-------
ST MAS. m CAN ASIAN AND
Mo Ta
0m Taor-------
Bale* Tax
Friday. Apatl 17. ISM
Thor* la mo ml to atowMr In U» $*rfc. Yoor way will grow plainer
•vary day K yN travel to Ulr right direction: "Hie path of the just
la aa the shining light, that ihineth more and more unto the perfect
day —Prov. 4:18. , —-----r--------—---.—
— » inujor points In Oovernor Ruhert
8. Kerr's Initial message, was a
latlve circus. Its Wiling dBurned hy
war. struck Its tent aarly today
and ended a iour-month run
marked by Mg tax ana approprta-
tlon increases and enactment of
a program toocluig aimoat every
governmental function.
The session, voting a gf«.000,000
expenditure for the biennium and
boosting tax revenue hy an **U-
mated 110.000.000 annually, aon-
cltided on the usual hurried not
as proponents of minor legislation
sought to beat the final gavel.
The legislature had in* customary j
investigations and flat fights. It |
could, however, claim the dlatlnc- |
lion of approving the largest single j
appropriation Item evrr paiaed—
$31,300,000 to nourish Oklahoma's
common schools.
Increased school aid, one of the
■m
vs* the fir* I
had mm I
to pat ha *M» af tap w# ware so toopraeaed that for
Imhkt no one woke. Then
8 Ml
dam in one hay
a4> • pmnd
towoek
WHO fTANQffil
U4I* LiM* —
Twilight of the Gods*
bone o| contention which touched
off some of the mail adroit Jock-
uyv c- the invasion of Germany there have been a *«*•« eying of tire session.
o, suras rjsr ssrs sssr
glNCE
self and hi» country.
The allusion ma.v be a little vairue to people who
haven’t the opportunity or inclination to see the Warner
operas, or whose reading taste doesn’t lead them to an
evening curled up with the libretto of Wagners four-part
“Ring of the Nibelungs.” So it might not be out of place
to note that the allusion is becoming appallingly literal.
“The Twilight of the Gods,” last of the cycle of "Ring"
operas, ends with the destruction by fire of Valhalla,
dwelling place of the Teutonic gods. The conflagration
starts modestly enough from the funeral pyre of the hero
Siegfried. Rut soon the flames rise from earth and envelop
the gods’ domain. Since the gods are a murderous, greedy
and generally disreputable lot, nobody in the audience feels
too sorry about it.
* * *
rpHE fire which now consumes Germany started modestly
In general, the two houses, which
at the outset exhibited signs of
I'ebelUan, went along with Uie
governor on expansion of school,
hlghwuy and health facilities. They
flung back at him a proposal to
finance them u.iouxh an Increase
In the two percent sales tax.
Kerr termed it tne -greatest
legislature In the history of the
.state."
• • •
WAR BONDS
A MONO most significant of more
o \ than 300 measures which drop-
L enough, too. First Hitler burned the reichstag, in defi
ance of truth and democratic government. Then he burned
the books, in defiance of fredom of thought and spirit.
When the flames grew hotter he put the torch to Warsaw
and Rotterdam, until finally the fire flamed on the shores
of the Arctic and the Mediterranean, and on the banks of
the Volga.
Now the fires that Hitler kindled are consuming his
own country and his own people. It is within his power to
quench them. But Hitler is as empty of conscience or
compassion as were the Wagnerian gods he worships. He
and his followers have made their choice: If they cannot
conquer they will drag their country and tiicdr people down
with them.
Hitler and his mouthpiece Goebbels have now forgotten
the "superior” German culture which they ranted about
so long. They do not lift a voice or hand to preserve the re-
maining "cultural monuments ’ that they used to whine
ami snivel over in the earlv days of allied bombings.
# * #
are sacrificing German antiquities and their de-
fenders with the same inhuman contempt which they
showed for the pitiful inmates of their prison camps.
The leaders of Natiism have finally shown themselves
to be as remote from and consideration or feeling for hu-
mankind as were th gods of Valhalla. Even to the Germans,
their occasional ranting* of victory can only be the hollow-
est of echoes.
Hitler and his henchmen, knowing themselves doom-
ed, are satisfying their last ambition. Like the gods who
looked on the ushes of Valhalla, they will be able to see a
burned, blackened and destroyed Germany us they turn for
a last look from their own path to destruction and oblivion.
'J'HEY
The ]M>st-wur modern home is going to have every-
thing but a kitchen large enough for a man to loaf in.
The allies’ answer to the Nazi underground terror or-
ganization, the “Werewolves,” is, "Who’s afraid of?”
The ol’ baseball season is on again and we’re betting
on the Yanks—the ones overseas.
We’re told that several new brands of cigarets are on
the market. They must be hidden down under that “Sorry”
sign.
Down Memory Lane
Apr. 27. 1920
Miss Fern Forrest entertained at a delightful rook
party Saturday evening. After the game a daintv repast
was served to the 12 guests.
The marriage of Miss Blanche Fahay to Drew Cauby
was beautifully celebrated last evening at eight o’clock in
the home of the bride’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. T. D.
Fahay. Only attendants were Miss Sara Scott and Morris
Stock. The bridegroom is the son rf Mr. and Mrs. George
Cauby, formerly ol this city. He has established himself
in the jewelry business at Wenatchee. Wash.
Mrs. L. R Gephart presided at a meeting of the Dcl-
phian society Monday afternoon. The lesson, “Persia,” was
led by Mrs. J, P. Neal.
Stigler Asks Revision
Of Indian Bureau
WASHINGTON, Apr. 31—UP) —
Complete reorganization of the In-
dian bureau wax advocated Thurs-
day by mm—rr‘r*‘"~ William O.
Stigler (Democrat. Oklahoma),
Cherokee Indian.
The Indian, he told the house dur-
ing debate on the Interior depart-
ment appropriations MU. will never
be completely emancipated until
changes are made In the buresu.
Among these, he suggested modi-
fication of a policy that all final
decisions must come from the bu-
reau’s Chicago and Washington of-
fices.
™ m . Apr’ 27’ 1935
avenuef M Th°*na8 M’ Aderhold. 405 South Williams
Look and Learn
Miss Florence Atone Powell and Miss LaHoma Frank-
end guests of the former’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. G
fS33£ *22? Mr-and Mrs-H<=•
•venue. *
301 North Rock Island
S. Queen Victoria.
4. MlchelangXlo.
#• Osset*.
1. What would happen to a dive
bomber if the pilot should black out!
2. What is probably the oldest sci-
ence?
3. When she died, what queen had
thirty-seven living grandchildren?
4. Who painted the catling at the
Slstlne chapel In the Vatican?
5. What Is the plural of genus?
ANRWNM
1. The army air carps eays that
there are devices on dive bombers to
pull them out of a dive If the pilot
ped through the hopprr to become
law wen* these:
1. Authorizing unitized operation
of oil fields In representing activi-
ties with an expected substantial
Increase Ui production.
2. Levying an additional 2 cent*
a gallon tax on gasoline.
3. Increasing from $8 to $1 a
barrel the state tax on beer.
4. Enacting a community prop-
erty law to substitute for one
held Invalid by the U. 8. supreme
court.
5. Transefrrlng general revenue
fund surplus to the highway de-
partment to match federal road
building funds.
6 Setting up a $1,000,000 public
health program.
7. Effecting broad changes In
organization of soil conservation
programs.
8 Creating a new board of re-
gents for agricultural and me-
chanical colleges.
9. Bringing domestic as well as
foreign Insurance companies under
provisions of a 4 percent gross
premium tax.
10. Revising the automobile li-
cense fee system, with changes
which will bring In additional rev-
enue.
11. Authorising many state lnsti- j
tut Ions of higher learning to con-
struct new buildings through Is-
suance of revenue bonds.
see
XT'ERR. an Important figure In
•oV the Oklahoma oil Industry,
said the unitization act was "the
mast advanced and most progres-
sive of any state." It permits op-
erators of 80 percent of the area
of a common source of supply to
petition for formation of a unit,
but representatives of 15 percent
of the pool may knock out the
move by protesting to the corpora-
tion commission.
Most talked of matter In early
days of the session was a move-
ment toward lmneochment of A
L. Crable, state superintendent of
public Instruction, which failed
when the house refused to accept
an Investigating committee’s re-
port. Crable was under fire for
alleged complicity In textbook
scandals of the Marland adminis-
tration In 1937.
weee just a*
/Anxious to
I —• •** *
to Ms pastor, tos
tost stumbled shout a
«n to* stairs, not being sUa la
ww k
to discover q
was behind
» was quite a mipetos
toiqga thrqe normal focus. The.I
|«*» had cams In tor Maimed
_ iWnt doqrn on the settee, ree
imowner from her journey. (h-ivlng was
Ttoiwotona-**^ unvoting, but it was ham am
tonnitout Itato bach, they «u agreed
All You Can Eat I when the dinner be|) rang. (
- B^ty:flV*-0*ntl. [hurried downstairs to jolnttw i
u, .« ~ i ”°wM ‘"lo *• '
the cleaning lo do, the silver to ^
polleh the buttf to mold tta Bths I At 4 Sue come down to Uv-bb
of Pare to prlnt-ww coiled them •** tel1 to wh*1 *»8 ««tot
BlUefsres—to my nothing of the <*• ««•«*• “oota*
cooking. None of us eat dawn a **“ *• th« »•*»
minute ; ‘he others were rooking on the p
By Sunday all of ue felt the “•**“?** “to* **
strain. My father jumped every “ken the driver of the Pi
time the telephone rang. My moth- to his office for treetm
er kept scrutinising the shy. though White were
there wesn t a cloud in it. Sue •bout T*1** had take
was bossy. She was going to wait of doughnuts to est on
on table, and It hod gone to her ^ wouW co“* ^ck 1
head completely. “Do thU," ahe 8und“y' th«V had promised,
snapped. “Do that.” Julia and 11 When everyone had gone, J
were sulking because we had to holp I s»d I went Into the office wl
In the kitchen. Mrs. OuptIH was | «ny mother was counting the n
Irritable. It wasn't the extra work sy she had taken In. Her chi
that upset her. hut the lavishneae I were flushed, and her eyes i
Behind the Scenes
In Washington
Notes About
Saving Soil
beaming.
"We’re
said.
practically home,”
(To He Canttnued)
BY PBTEH EPSON'
CAN FRANCISCO.—Looking under the bed to see who might.
^ be hiding there to disturb the sweet dreams of peace being
envisaged for San Francisco, the first thing that greets the eye Is e
scary spectacle eo frightening it make* you want to dive for tho
pillows and pull the covert up over your head
New Iteme of Interest
Concerning Form Work In
Control North Csaodlnn
Conservation District
tight. It la
The district supervisor's heavy
equipment Is constructing terrace*
prospect of representative* from : on the Edna Webb farm operated
42 U. S. clubs, societies and pressure groups who
have been invited by the State Department to send
to San Francisco spokesmen who wtll serve as
consultants to the eight-member official U. S.
delegation.
The 48 United Nations may have their difficulties
In agreeing how they will lie in the same bed of
security, but their peaceful slumbers will not be
disturbed nearly so much by a Soviet Russian with
a secret vote. plan, a temperamental Do Gaulle
Frenchman with a collection of trick amendments,
two quarreling Polish factions, nor a half-dozen
British dominion* scheming quietly to rule the world, ae they may
be bothered by this fringe of 42 lobbyists.
Included in the AS are four big business groups, two associations
of lawyers, threw labor organizations, four veterans' organizations,
four farm groups, five women’s societies, two Cetholic, two Jewish
and two Protestant auxiliaries, six pease societies, four business-
men's luncheon clubs, three educational societies and the National
Association for the Advancement of Colored People.
If the object of San Francisco is to eetablish peace and keep the
jwoca, why don’t a lot of these people stay home? The fact that
morn than one of each at tlie pressure groups are Invited to San
Francisco Is In itself evidence that in normal times they can’t agree
with each other on the same thing.
T OVINQ this country and not wishing any other, It Is possible to
enjoy the corn relish at high npon knlfe-and-fork deliberations of
(Jons, Rotarlans and Klwanis; to view with detachment the bicker-
ings of A. F. of L., C. I. a and N. A. M.; to argue religious differences
with tolerance; and to get some genuinely hearty laughs every now !
pnd then out of the women, God bless 'em, who will join clubs. AU j
these things are as American as apple pie and ice cream and we
underatana them. .....
A* a demonstration of American public opinion expressing itself by
insisting that th* atateamon get together and form an organization
that will stop war, this 42-act greater combined lobby of counsellors
tOT exert a wholesome influence. But if the boys and girls get the
Idoa that they are going to San Francisco to put over pet projects, to
insist on patented panaceas of thair own preparation, to stage demon-
strations and raise holy Ned if their private picayunlsh perfectionism
je not followed to the last detail— ,
In the name of peace, sweet peace, they ought to stay home.
by George Christian. Terrace lines
were surveyed by the district engi-
neering drew.
she saw about. The shelves lined
with plea. Four long pans of rolls
rising. Orest heaps of doughnuts.
8hortcakes In double layers. TTe
big kettles ready for the chowder
and lobsters.
• * *
The first car made its appear-
ance Just before 1 o'clock—a red
Maxwell runabout with shining
black cushions. It hod taro passen-
gers, the driver and a woman whose' ■
face and head wane swathed In I c»n“ to Fr»nc* on General Dw
a bright green veil. (Oreen was ° Eisenhower's invitation to
easy on the eyes, so people said.) th« horrors of German conean
Benjamin helped the woman out. tion oampa returned to Paris Th
and Julia led her at onee to the «“y night from the notorious Bu
parlor i*nw*M comp and said they an
Publishers See
Nazi Atrocities
PARIS, Apr. 27 —(Ft- Elgfal
American publishers and editors
The driver had no sooner taken | “ v*ait others.
A farm conservation plan has been
written on the farm operated by E.
R. Steele, southeast of Oeary. Ap-
proximately 35.575 linear feet
terraces has been constructed by the
district supervisors heavy equip-
ment.
The 8MCO engineers ram terrace
lines on the Black Wolf estate, two
miles west of Geary, which Is farm-
ed by Burney Crothers. Diversion
terraces are being built at intervals
wider than standar dterraces since
a large part of this land will be
put back to grass. P. K. and Low-
Off his goggles and his wind cuffs Elsenhower told them that
than five or six loafers gathered umes of heretofore unravealod
around. ' dence of Nasi brutality and n
“Another coming," someone call- der of civilian and military |
ed out. scnnel would be made aveWohh
We listened. Pure enough. Boon them.
It appeared, a black, two-seated Tlie editors named a comml
Packard with enormous headlights consisting of Julius Ochs Adlei
ell Smith are constructing the tar- of the Maxwell.
of polished brass. The New York Times. Stanley K
One of its passengers rose and of Readers Digest, and Mate
stepped out on the running board Bingay of -the Detroit Free F
to give it balance while it made to draft a report on their coni
the curve, ltien it puHed up be- slons concerning German street
hind the Maxwell. Five men, wear- _
lng dusters, leaped out in a light,
springy way. though they were mid- {
dle-aged and heavy. They shook
hands with my father and the driver
races with a D-6 Caterpillar tractor
. and a 10-foot grader.
^he engineering crew has survey-
ed terrace lines on the M. F. Lyle,
Monument To List
Pioneer Cowboys
WOODWARD Apr. 37—(to-
i B. "Barney” McAdao of Cqrn
one of the few remaining pre-Chi
kee Strip cowboys, says that
names of early day cowboy* 0*1
Some road."
“Yes, slree.”
“How are your brakes doing?"
spsj
- them. Looking up w* saw an au- Cangr““T,'rn Milt Qarbw.
Dr. D. F. Stough has completed ; tom obi 1* almost upon us. Yet there
_ McAdoo has been in charge of
the seeding of 50 acres of native j had been no chugging. No knock-
grass on the Deafy Fletcher and ! lng. A tiny line of ateam was ap-
the Mable Young Bull place south- | pearing from below Its body.
west of GeXry.
The equipment owned by James C.
Kerr is constructing terraces on the
Mary Piper* farm west of Green-
field.
Problem a Day
If A has 2/3 as much money aa
divide 24 by 1/2; take 3/4 and 1'2
of 48 separately; add 48. 36. and 24.
•HIP ‘INGREDIENTS'
SOUTH PORTLAND. Me.—(U.R>—
E. J. Wall Is drilling grass on
the Red Buffalo place west of
1 Oeary with a Ford tractor and the
Indian service drill.
"It’s a White Steamer." one of
the men called out. “A limousine.”
Julia poked me. “Look at the
ladles." she hissed.
* * *
and says a prope*- memorial ser
will be held after the names
engraved on the marker.
B, and B has 3/4 as much as C, C Into every uberty ship bullt at the; A farm pond has been staked on
has $24 more than A. How much England Shipbuilding corpora- ^ !*■ Smith farm southeast of
have they together? 1 tlon y(rd goeg M mlleK ^ weid. Oeary. Neighboring farmers will
ANSWER J mg, ag.ooo rivet*. 3.300 tons of steel, us« ‘he11- teams and small fresnos to
$108. Explanation—Let 4/4 equal'm mueg 0f 0#bie and 26 tons of assist Smith with the construction
O'M money. Multiply 3/4 by 3/3; 1 paint.
of his farm pond.
Private Breger Abroad
By Dave Breger
| Bob Courtney is planting lovegrass
: on his farm noruieaat or Green-
field with a two-row plantar.
During the past week approxl-
; mately 147 acres of lovegrass has
been seeded on the Oliver Prtchett,
1 Hardy Robinson. Flora B. Robinson,
J. W. Dear lng, Jim Smith, Nig
White, Henry Wadley and W. J.
| Wadley forms.
HOOSIER EGGS STAND, TO
VALPARAISO, Ind. —(U.»— ,
other egg-standing story comes fi
There were three of them in the Mrs. Clayton Relf Routs, who i
back seat, wearing Identical striped that her Hoosler hens are no cli
silk coats. But that wasn't all. i w*»en it comes to egg-standing. :
They wore hoods and masks over hens' eggs not only stand on
their faces, and the masks were fit- rounded end, but also on the poi
ted with isinglass. ed end. One stood on the roun
The White drew up behind toe end °n a window *111 all night.
—rB
U. S. Senator
l»mtrr t» Prevli
lesson in English
WORDS OFTEN MISUSED; Do
not zay. “The men furnished dif-
ferent analysis.” Analyses Is the
I plural form, last syllable pronounced
seise.
I OFTEN MI8PRONOUNCRD:
i Routine. Pronounce rao-ten, as as
In brat, • as In ara. accent last tyl-
^TBht’3 the teat tint* he jumpe with ue till he learns to
! OFTEN MISSPELLED: Boun-
teous. Observe the five vowels.
fcmOMYMB: Roll, revolve, to
j tat*, turn.
WORD STUDY: "Us* a word
three times and It to yours." Lot
us Increase our vocabulary by masr
terlng one word each tog. TWsyl
wood: MORBID; abnrumaBy Im-
pressionable. especially by gloomy
Ideas. "DteeWng on such thlngf
products a morbid mlad,”
HORIZONTAL 4 Presses for
1.6 Pictured U S. payment
Senator 5 Olimpse
10 Noted 8 Body grri
11 Forward 7 Exclimatipne
13 He waa for- • *«<P»*nt
meriy - of (suffix)
his stale (ah.) • Meaeur* of 28 Behave
”85. ilKR?
!?£!?!-<8eoU 15»slf-#m
17 Parent
19 Dispositions
21 Momentum
83 Scrap
24 Requested
87 fish eggg
28 Even fcontr ) 47 Fra*
44 Cut
48 Above
81 Notion
32 Like
24 Exist
25 Soil
28 Lett*
32 Scrub
33 Hew
HaniP'
shire city
34 Cubic meter
18 Heating
devices
M Edward (ah )
87 Dutch (ab.)
98 Musical work
41 Kitchen
«SS“*
40 Obese
M VeatUetfnd
eno* (eh.)
30 Literary
scraps
81 Legal point
88 From
80 Cushion
40 Indians
41 Break water
42 Either
48 Tills
48Tellurium >
(symbol) *
50 Mon’s n*m
01 Earth (cotnl
form)
54 North
Carolina ($i
58 Symbol (or
cobqlt
3E*
IT Wound spark
•a®
JiiJ
sm
r IT FIT
JUKI*
31
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. 54, No. 50, Ed. 1 Friday, April 27, 1945, newspaper, April 27, 1945; El Reno, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc923525/m1/4/: accessed April 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.