The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 54, No. 91, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 14, 1945 Page: 1 of 8
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MY TRUCKS WILL COLLECT WASTE PAPER FOR SALVAGE FRIDAY MORNING-HAVE YOUR BUNDLES PLACED OUT IN FRONT EARLY!
The El Reno Daily Tribune
4U9 MEANS UNITED PRESS
Gay Deceiver
t
fir
y
Did You Hear
JULIA ALICE WHENRY of
"Fort Reno, pharmacist’s mate
third class in the WAVES, now
is on duty at a navy Installation
at Pearl Harbor, T. H.
Ray Clifton Beard of Boston.
Mass., a native of El Reno who
is serving aboard a battleship in
the Pacific, has been promoted
to ship's cook first class. Beard
participated in the Aleutians
campaigns, the invasions of
southern France and Normandy,
has done convoy duty in the
Atlantic and has seen action in
the central Pacific. He entered
the navy in July 1942. received
his basic training at San Diego,
Calif., and was assigned to his
ship in December 1942 His wife
resides in Boston.
j When It appeared the attractive
rharmer (topi might win a queen-
j-of-the-ball contest at Pennsylvania
ate college, off came "her" wig to
^•eveal Robert S. McClintock. Jr.,
| bottom > of Marianna. Ark., army
j.pecialized training corps student.
9ut before the deception was re-
vealed, "she" danced with a col-
onel and generally was the belie
if the ball Barracks buddies en-
ered McClintock in the contest as a
tag
Armies Chosen
For Occupation
Third and Seventh
Are Designated
El Reno School
Builr’^Fund
Election. \'*ed
%
Hoard Is SeK
Continuation Oi $
Pay-as-You-Go 1*0*
A special election on the build-
ing fund levy for the El Reno school
district has been called by the j
board of education lor Tuesday, j
June 19, It was announced today
by Paul R. Taylor, superintendent of
schools.
The election is in keeping with *
what the board termed "the desire of -
the people to continue the pay-as- i
you-go policy” now in effect in the '
construction of school buildings, !
and to avoid bond issues as much i
as possible. j
Taylor asserted that the building
levy plan makes possible the ac-
cumulation in advance of funds for
necessary building operations.
Five mills were levied last year,
and the proposed levy is Intended i
to continue the program previously i
approved by the people.
"Our board believes." said J. M 1
Burge, board president, "that the
taxpayers of El Reno are proud of
the financial condition of the school
district and that they want to keep
it as nearly debt-free as possible.
Indebtedness Prevented
' ^ I* well to remember,” he con-
tinued," that the Junior highschooi
and the Webster and Lincoln ele-
mentary schools are paid for in
full, and the two grade schools were
constructed by building fund levies
and no debt was Incurred.” ing Nipponese was annihilated by
Burge expressed the desire of the [u S seventh infantrymen crumb-
board to have on hand, "in order i llnB the eastern anenor of the en-
E1 Reno, Oklahoma, Thursday, June 14, 1945
1**! MEANS ASSOCIATED PRESS
Okinawa Japs
'Written Oft'
Suzuki Preparing
To Meet Invasion
Job Controls
Are Operating
In Local Area
Flexibility of Rules
Will Seek To Hold
Unemployment Down
Employment controls of the war
manpower commission will be op-
erated in the El Reno area. Allan I
Willoughby, local manager of the j
United States employment service. |
said today.
This Is being done, Willoughby
said, “to assure staffing of war and .
essential establishments with suf-I
flcient flexibility to hold local un- i
j employment at a minimum."
Willoughby has Just returned from
Oklahoma City where he attended a
statewide conference of the 38 em-
ployment service office managers.
The meeting, called by Dave Van- I
divter, state WMC director, was for j
the purpose of explaining the man- |
ner in which WMC control pro-
grams would be operated.
Local labor supplies in relation to ’
the over-all worker demand of the I
war effort will be the primary con- i
trolling factor In future application j
of the program, Willoughby said.
Throughout the ninth WMC re- i
Volume 54, No. 91
Harry Hopkins Reports to President
M
M?
j mm
■
J
* i
J*:
J*
I
BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
Japan's cave-dwelling troops on
Okinawa, squeezed into one shrink- .
ing 13-square-mlle pocket were'8100, whlch lncludes Oklahoma
written off as lost today by Pre- l*‘ansas' and Arkansas, this
• e I program will be maintained until,
mler Kantaro Suzuki, who indi-
cated military rulers of Nippon are
concentrating on amassing an army
of 2,500,000 to 5.000,000 to repel an
invasion "several months" hence.
Harry Hopkins, who returned from a three-wee i mission to Moscow, reported to President Trum&r
after breakfast at the White House. Grouped behind the president are, left to right: Joseph Davies, wn»
recently returned from a mission to London; Admir il William D. Leahy, chlef-of-staff to the president
and Hopkins. < NEA Telephoto.)
WASHINGTON. June 14 -<vpy—
-cretary ot War Henry L. Stlmson
Id today the third and seventh
krmlcs have been selected as the
to be able to take advantage of con
ditlons that might arise that would
call for Immediate action, "as much
money as possible,” stating also that
such a fund will be an asset In the
post-war years
"The board Is loosing forward,” he
said, “to the time when such de-
mands must be met,” referring to the
time when El Reno would need and
want expansions in the school pro-
gram. “and It hopes to have at
least a portion of the funds avail-
able as the needs arise.”
Voting Places Designated
Voting places have been desig-
nated by the board In the four ele-
mentary schools of the city. The
polls will open at 6 a m and close
at 7 p m Election officials were
the Pacific war is needed
Administration Explained
Area directors and local man-
agers were told, however, to admin-
ister these controls on the basis of
. . „ . . J the labor supply with suffl-
A banzai charge by 300 scream- j dent flexibility to hold down local
unemployment.
Previously he added, these deter-
minations were made on a state,
national or regional basis.
Local managers were instructed
Few Soldiers
Lost at Sea
emy suicide line, as marines of the
sixth marine division completed |____________
the job of wiping out the Japanese jat the Oklahoma City meeting, Wil-
loughby continued, to keep a full
picture of the necessary war efforts
Naha pocket.
Australians Advanre
Australians reconquering Borneo
put one air field into use, cap-
tured a second and drove toward
a third Two other columns pressed
toward Brunei town, capitol of the
invaded area.
In other principal ground eij-
gagements, Chinese reached the
outskirts of Lluchow, former U 8.
air base in southeast China, and
U. 6 37th division Infantrymen tn
the Philippines recaptured Amer-
ican tanks which fell into Jap-
anese hands at Bataan
Air Power Effective
Between 750,000 and 1.750.000
and the state and national demand
for workers in meeting the produc-
tion schedules and services in or-
der that any local decisions taken
tn channeling workers would not in-
terfere with the immediate war
needs
At this time. Willoughby asserted,
principal demands in Oklahoma are
coming from the railroads, food pro-
< PLEASE TURN TO PAOE 8>
Figures Are Given
In Grim Accounting
WASHINGTON, June 14 —<U.fi>—
Final Battle Loomimg
Over Voting Formula
listed by the board as follows _______
Lincoln elementary school—MrsJjaimnese were estimated to have I
___James K Archer. Inspector; Mrs been killed in 8uperfort raids on
merican armies occupation forces Judge, Mrs. D L. ; Tokyo and Yokohama alone, un-J
_ . ,, .. , ,, Jimerson, clerk; Mrs. Edwin Lvons *derscoring Japanese worries over I
m Germany, rather than the 15th ^ and Mrs Roderick B Rice, coun-1 increasing U. S air power I
*rmy i10. , i Tokvo radio again reported Yanks
He did not. however, disclose the 1,,,, .'fr elementary school-Mrs. were preparing for a new invasion.
but Tokyo couldn't make up Its
mind whether It would be Japan
future of the ]5tli army, which until ” L Mart,n- inspector; Mrs John
Caldwell. Judge: Mrs J W Mvers
ently has been viewed a, the clerk; Mrs John Hoblvpr —
robable occupation outfit. h. R. Swagerty. counters
Stlmson explained that at present ! Central elementary school — Mrs
he occupation unit actually consists 1 Frank Cleere Inspector; Mrs A. E.
lly of a headquarters forces of the Bogan. Judge; Mrs. R. L. Mathews,
ew armies, made up of about 1,000 'clerk; Mrs W B Carder and Mrs
en and officers for each army , John M, Carter, counters,
e divisions and corps now In the ) Irving elementary school—Mrs W
wo armies were not listed tn this IA Blggert. Inspector; Mrs. H W
itlal announcement. Wleman. Judge; Mrs Peggy Paxton.
Units Bring Screened | clerk: Mrs J Y. Morris and Mrs
Stlmson explained that the va- 'R ^ McGinnis, counters,
lous units of the two armies were
elng screened. This apparently re-
erred to the plan to reshuffle and
rganlze various division under the
deployment and demobilization
rogram The eventual composition
f the third and seventh, therefore,
presumably will be quite different
than that prevailing when the two
rmles were In the field.
Patton Will Return , _ . t |
Oeneral Oeorge 8 Patton. Jr will ~Sch001 buSFS ,n thP northeast sec-
return to his third army command !?r nf Oklahoma are In better condi-
gn Europe !Uon ,han ‘hose in other parts of
. ... . . . , the state.
a dispatch from supreme head-
quarters today, authoritative sources
■reported said the 15th army would
remain In Oermany until December
or the China coast. There ap-
peared to be no doubt In the mind
of Premier Admiral Suzuki, who
said It would take several months
for the allies to prepare an in-
vasion force of 500 000 and by that
time Japan would be ready to
meet them with five to 10 times
as many men.
Ranchers Told Of
Regulation of Gas
Industry Disputed
SAN FRANCISCO, June 14—(UP) jslcally Impossible to complete the
—The "little” united nations, de- work before a week from next
feated tn their fight to "soften" j Saturday, and possibly not until
the Yalta voting formula, prepared | June 25.
Of 4.453,061~U ~S.'soldiers* embarked L°day f°r “ flnal baltlc agatnst : ^ structure of the new league
by ship to fight the axis in Europe B‘8 ,PU.e v,eKt0 ^ °ver amen(*- !‘s virtually complete except for
and Africa, only 3.604 were lost at . ,° the *°rld Char*" _«• few holes here “nd there
sea ThiR issue and several odds and | They are the questions of the
-pi,, ... . ends of the proposed charter which , right of withdrawal from the or-
nortlonaJta seemed to de,V solution caused j ganlzation. where there shall be
portlonately, than that of World united nations conference delegates
War I, despite the greater deadliness to set June 23 unofficially as the
tn this war of U-boats, bombing earliest possible date of adjourn-
Planes and mines. ment.
But it was only part of the grim No official closing date has been
accounting of World War II. New set since the earlier target of June
data on the war at sea disclosed to- 6 was missed. The aim had been
day that: toward next Wednesday But of-
1. This country lost 1,554 merchant f,clals conceded that it will be phy-
ships of 6,277,077 tons, to enemy " --
action or as a result of eg uses due
to war conditions, from Sept. 1. 1939,
j to May 8, 1945 The total Includes
a large number of small ships
2 V. S. merchant seamen have
suffered 6.066 casualties, including
5579 dead and missing and 487 pris-
oners of war.
3. A total of 4.770 merchant ships,
allied and neutral, have been lost
to tlie enemy action. "
a Th- tt o , . . . Jenks Simmons. El
4 The U. S navy lost 99 ships of chalrla.n> ln „„
provision for expulsion, some minor
items on trusteeships, whether the
Big Five can veto nomination of
a secretary general, plans for
transitional military arrangements,
and the whole problem of an in-
terim commission to act until the
new organization Is formally set
up.
Members of the board of educa-I /kl> t tT"* a*
>n are Burge, president. H C Dor- Of A r PPPZC Ollt
lion
ler. vice president. Sf<n.. i.nru n
M McOInley and L. E Hale, mem-
bers.
(’heck Is Made
On School Buses
OKLAHOMA CITY, June 14-i/n
J M Oentry, state safety com-
missioner said todav If school buses
"In other parts of the state were tn
If the sifn.tinn .11, ,a too<i u*da»>»lty as those in some
hi men ^ w h * move | northeast Oklahoma sections, a big
cured sur^n * h ih,n. W‘U * d'- 1 load <* "°rry would be lifted from
S2 -Wr d-r.r-m.M-
He said that out of 198 buses In-
spected by Oklahoma highway pa-
jtTnlted States, the dispatch said.
Stlmson also said that Oeneral
Mark W Clark, the allied ground
force commander In the Mediter-
ranean theater, would return to his
command soon Whether Patton
trol troopers In 10 northeast coun-
ties. only 25 were found with de-
fective brakes and 33 without lights
... -------.This la the in .lif t number of de-
will continue permanently with the tecta of this tvpe found In any m-
thlrd army in Europe is not clear, [trol division.
Lack ot first aid kits on 115 buses
was the moat unfavorable Item re-
ported, the commissioner said
The 10 counties are In Lieuten-
ant W 8 Abbott * Claremore dlvt-
Marlne Private Earl O Bullck. i *i°n
wounded recently in the fighting on I —-
PAWHU8KA, June 14—«P>—H M
Conway, Chicago, told some 450
western and southwestern ranchers
today that the office of price ad-
ministration had bottlenecked beef
distribution through a "freeze out”
of northern feeders
Conway, representing a market-
ing information service, spoke at the
11th annual conference and inspec-
tion tour of the Osage county cat-
tlemen's association, a gathering re-
plete with all the cow country color
of a Hollywood horse opera
The Chicagoan and F O. Drum-
mond. Hominy banker-ranqjier
agreed the OPA was Inconsiderate of
dealers who buy range cattle and
fatten them for market
OKLAHOMA CITY. June 14—(>P.
—Representatives of the 16 states
of the interstate oil compact met
today amid Indications there might
be a wrangle over the question of
state versus federal regulation of
the gas Industry.
The first day was devoted to
committee meetings. The first gen-
eral session will be opened to-
morrow by Oovemor Andrew- F
8choeppel of Kansas, commission
chairman.
The compact commission will de-
vote the entire trree days of its
quarterly session to a discussion of
the production and conservation
of gas.
Waste Paper
Collection Set
Young Volunteers
Needed in Drive
Ninth Army Is
Due Back Soon
Few Details Given
On Redeployment
all kinds sunk
Jacent wateis.
Reno salvage SUPREME HEADQUARTERS, A
Atlantic or art- “ — — appeal to city EF. June 14-OPt— Authoritative
Its loss 111 .nri yOUth*’ asked ,oday ,hat b°y* from quarters said today that Lleuten-
missing in these waters was qrm U >e“rS Up asslst h,m ln the scraP ant General William H Simpson’s
men, and 35 marines Overall navy Additional volunteers are need- to r*tlirn to the United States ln
ship losses In all theater* total 314 ,d' he sa,d’ lf the c,ty ta to have ™ shortly thereafter.
The army personnel losses at sea complete coverage by the army1 How many divisions will get
were caused by the sinking or dam- truclts ,urnlshed from Fort Reno started home July 1 and how many
aging ol 41 ships, ranging trom small f0r the drlve' of th0M> rea"hln* the Unlted
auxiliary craft to large transports, Those who volunteer, Stmimvis Sta,es will continue to the Pacific
during the 41 months from Dec. 8, added. should meet him at the high- cou,d not be learned.
1M1, to May 9, 1945. school at 9 a. m. Friday. The army ' However, It Is logical to assume
In this gigantic movement of sol.itr1Cl“ WlU be there at ,hat “me. »hat the ninth army headquarters
dlers. losses were 004 Dercent— Further. 8lmmons continued, in.will follow the first army to the
tour men lost at sea for every 10- °rd*r 10 delay the worlt of c°hro'* regardless of what dtvl-
000 embarked—as compared with !!* P“P" aa iMir as Possible, all slons it h*s under Its command
losses of 9 072 ln the last war in those who asslst 1,1 th« drive wUl be All American armies tn Europe
that conflict. 1,463 of the 2 008 931 *° * iTtt luncheon up town now are transferring divisions
soldiers sent to France were lost on V* wlU ^ 0,1 Shnmons, who “round to facilitate the redeplov-
The forum comes Just tn advance | t(je wav on Is park recreation program direc- mcnt and occupation program. Few
• *----*■*—-— - tor. details are available here about
Churchill Says
Deadlock Over
Poland af End
Moscow Radio Reports
16 Face Early Trials
For Terroristic Acts
BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
Shortly after Prime Minister
Winston Churchill said that rela-
tions among Britain, the United
States and Russia had improved,
with the breaking of the dead-
lock over Poland, the Moscow radio
announced that the 16 Polish po-
litical leaders accused of "terror-
istic acts" behind Red army lines
would be tried within "the next
few days."
The broadcast named General
Bronislaw Okullckl as the ring-
leader of the Polish group which,
it said, would be charged specific-
ally with "organizing terroristic
acts and maintaining illegal wire-
less transmitters ln the rear of
Soviet troops In Poland.”
Disturbing Note Recalled
Announcement of the arrest of
the 16 Poles had disturbed the re-
lations of the Big Three powers
at the San Francisco world secur-
ilty conference several weeks ago.
Churchill said that Laborlte
Clement R. Attlee would accom-
pany him to the next Big Thres
meeting to be held sometime before
July 28.
He also told commons that Oen-
eral Charles DeGaulle "was sending
former Premier Edouard Herrlot
to London to ajudicate differences
between Prance and Britain over
the Levant situation.
He said the British had no Idea
“of trying to supplant our French
friends in Syria."
Meeting Place Secret
Churchill said the place of his
meeting with Premier Joseph Stalin
and President Harry S. Truman
must remain secret for the time
being.
The British press has speculated
that the Big Three might confer
in Vienna or Berlin.
Meanwhile, the British govern-
ment proposed a new executive
council for India which Viceroy
U>rd Wavell said would, "represent
a definite advance on the road to
self-government.”
Indians Win Recognition
Under the new council proposal,
finance and home department
members would be Indians, for the
j first time, and an Indian also would
be charged with the management
of India's foreign affairs.
In a radio broadcast from New
Delhi, Lord Wavell announced that
orders had been given for the re-
lease of members of the working
committee of the Indian All-Con-
gress party still ln detention. Mo-
handas K. Oandhi, spiritual lead-
er of the party, was released May
5. 1944, after 21 months detention.
of a nationwide Investigation of
the gas Industry by the federal
power commission, the agency
which ts expected to be the chief
topic of discussion at the parley.
Many of the states were reported
fearful the FPC Is extending its
control too far and that the *tate*
should struggle to keep their own
regulatory powers
Two Burglary Attempts
Are Reported to Police
i.uen them for market ln not *1-
lowing them sufficient profit. uKT*. d«P*r«”ent
Cattlemen from seven state. *nJ! ur ^ of abou' el«hl
Mexico were on h.nd for the con-'^Tj^! ch,ef ot
vpnfinn In tUm _ ^*_a_____ *U MWB/
Emergency Food
Assistant Named
To expodlte handling
old newspapers, magazines, boxes
and cartons should be placed on
the disposition The whole objective
is to get as many trained men
as possible to the Pacific swiftly.
front porches and tied In flat bun- W,hllp 'MV,n» enou*h f°r r°m
dies
HDnntnr*H ***h army-manned
Po emer- trucks, will collect the bundles from
Beason, Vernon.
MLss Corine
Tex., has been
«oncy food production and preser- the porches and curbs
vatlon assistant in Canadian coun-
ty. It was announced today by
Miss Margaret Edsel. county home
demonstration agent.
9J Miss Beason wUl work with the
Two attempted burglaries were; home
Lari Bulick Airivcs
At West Coast Hospital
Okinawa, I* hack In the United
States
His parents. Mr and Mr* J. A
Bullck, 520 South Oresham avenue,
received a telephone call Wedneaday
night from the Oakland General
hospital, where he now Is recuperat-
ing,
Leonard Godfrey Ih
Spending Ix*ave Here
Leonard Oodfrey, quartermaster
third claw, la home for a 10-day
leave He la visiting with his
mother. Mrs K B Oodfrey, 913
South Williams avenue
ventton ln the centei of a pictures-
que pastureland which last year
shipped 93.000.000 pounds of prime
beef to feed a nation at war.
General McLain Day
Roosts Rond Sales
OKLAHOMA CITY, June 14-
<UW—An estimated 1250,000 worth
of war bond* were purchased ln
Oklahoma City Wednesday ln con-
ine tlon with Major Oeneral Me-1
Police were notified at 7:55 p m
Wednesday that a screen had been
pulled loose and a window broken
and raised at the Sandcfur resi-
dence, 816 West London street,
plete domination of their zone In
Germany, the lnrormant said
The U S 97th Infantry division
Is the second complete division to
leave the European theater and ts
now boarding ship at Le Havre
Tlie 86th division Is the other Both
possibly are slated tor the Pacific
They will be followed shortly by
the second, filth, 54th. 87th, 95th,
and 104th Infantry divisions and
all of
______are to be sent to the Pa-
the Oklahoma City weather bureau clfic by way of the United States.
A graduate of Oklahoma A. and predlc,ed today. communications wane headquarters
M. college, Mias Beason arrived nnlv r*ln of consequence • announced.
Cloudy, Cooler
Weather Is Due
Hospital Head
Gives Testimony
TULSA, June 14—UP!—Dr Felix
Adams, superintendent of the East-
ern Oklahoma hospital at Vintta,
testified today that Ernest Wilmoth,
a sailor charged with murder, was
"not responsible for what he did"
the night his wife was slain.
■ Adams wai the last witness call-
ed by the defense ln a district court
trial resulting from the shooting
of the 20-year-old woman as she
lay asleep last May 10.
■ Adams told the court he believed
Wilmoth, suffering "mental fati-
gue,” lost his volition and his will-
power from a few minutes before
the shooting until he broke down
and sobbed at the police station.
demonstration aient from P,8rtly Cl°Udy and *omfwn«' “nd
her office mu h weafher wU1 Prevail in Ok- the 13th armored division
her office, and .ill have Jurtodlc- tohoma duilng the next 24 hours, which
tlon over Canadian county
n,i i ,„i. ... , ^ , J Hr bad been on sea duty aboard
live 1 V, « nn' Ti A r"1"' dra,royar lTas >n the
live a M7 Sun.et drive A atotar. I Atlantic, pr|„r to this leave end
aar,rtl- rM,d"‘at b,',-n«»and
Boutli Ellison avenue. Italy m that tour of duty
S.OM.OtK)"' nw ''countv^quota "is 'W8* ,rlghtfned away' however
»8,283,000
here today to take over her new . .... ------ "--
. .. j A2 Inch at Antlers In the extreme
a ,ea’ southeast Light showers fell at
For the past three year* Miss Muskogee and Poteau, the United
while the family was out of town I Beason has been vocational home Press reported
Apparently nothing was taken from |pronom*c* director of the Perkins,, Yesterday’s high was 92 degrees
Okto., schools at Boise City which also had the
The office which Miss Beeson 'ow °1 82 El Reno's maximum of
now operates Is a federal appoint- 79 ■nd minimum of 81 were more
ment and came through the ex- .typical for the state,
tension division of Oklahoma A. | Today’s maximum was expected
college at Stillwater.
the house, officers said
The police department was call-
ed to 209 North Orand avenue at
4:30 a. m. today after a tenant
heard a prowler removing the
screen from a window The prowler
he
fore the police were notified
and M
HERE EOR VISIT
M,lss Anne Kegelman of Los An-
man. Highland addition Miss Keg-
Fourth of July Show
I'lannod at Duncan
14 - (UJt
Water Is ’Rationed*
To Carmen Citizens
CARMEN. June 14—<U P»—
bo mechanical difficulties ln
to range from 75 In the panhandle
| to 85 to 90 in the southeast.
rlman Is employed by the Oeneral
A me i lean Life Insurance company
1 In Los Angeles.
sponsor another July Fourth fire-
works show this year
Several amateur a-te will be In-
cluded on the program, to be held
In a local stadium
Regents Will Allocate
Du, Funds for Ruildings
OKLAHOMA CITY, June 14—OPI
Carmen witer pumping plant, the The board of regent* for higher ed-
rlty council has begun "rationing" ocation meets Friday to study al-
wnter to local eltlsens location of funds for buildings at
The council asked that watering
of lawns be discontinued, but rains
jltys week have made the order
| un necessary
various schools next year.
Oklahoma A. and M. college and
Oklahoma City Spotted
On Nam Dream Map
OKLAHOMA CITY, June 14—01.90
—Oklahoma City was the only city
In the southwest given a spot on a
map of the United States by the
Nazis when they were making plans
for world conquest.
A copy of the Oerman "dream"
map was sent to the local chamber
of commerce by Lieutenant Colonel
John Embry, former Chandler at-
torney He wrote he had found it
ln Munich.
BOND FORFEITED
T H. Latham. 008 West London
street, charged with Illegal posses-
sion of liquor Wedneaday, forfeited
a 130 bond ln municipal court to-
the University of Oklahoma will re- 'day, according to record* In the of-
celve most of the funds. flee of Lee Harvey, chief of police
Airplanes May Appear
Ahead of Automobiles
DALLAS Tex., June 14—(UB -
Heralding post-war competition li
the transportation field. Souther:
Flight magazine said today that per
sonal airplanes will reach the pub
lie before new automobiles are mad(
available.
In s roundup article on light plan*
manufacturers' schedules, the maga-
zine said airplane companies plar
to deliver more than 25,000 planes foi
prlvste use during the first full
year of production.
The planes, like post-war autos
’will be Improved versions of pre-
war models, slightly higher in price,*
the magazine said
Weather
State Forecast
Partly cloudy tonight and Fi
day; cooler north central and a:
treme west tonight and ln extren
east Friday.
F3 Reno Weather
For a 34-hour period ending
8:30 a. m. today: High. 79; lo
•1; at 1:30 a. m„ 68.
State of weather: Clear to part
cloudy
Rainfall: None. M
m
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Dyer, Ray J. The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 54, No. 91, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 14, 1945, newspaper, June 14, 1945; El Reno, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc923892/m1/1/: accessed April 23, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.