The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 49, No. 171, Ed. 1 Monday, September 16, 1940 Page: 2 of 6
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TWO
EL RENO (OKLAJ DAILY TRIBUNE
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 16,1940
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ILL STILL WEAK
Waldorf Has Good Backs
But Puny Line
DETERMINED TO FIGHT AGAINST GERMANY SOMEWHERE
EVANSTON. 111., Sept. 16—<U.P>—
Nobody believed philosophic Lynn
Waldorf last fall when he predicted ]
Northwestern, boomed as the team !
0f the year, wouldn’t be so tough, j
They believe him now.
An even break in eight games j
V. ill be a good 1940 season. If the ;
Wildcats can whip Ohio State. Min- .
nesota or Notre Dame somewhere i
along the line it’ll be a whooping;
success. •
Northwestern’s trouble still is the I
tame—great backs with no line to j
slnack down the enemy for them. In i
Rill DeQorrevont. Paul Soper. Red :
*Hahnenstein, Don (Big Stoop) Claw-
son. Floyd Chambers. Don Kruger
and several others almost as good,
Waldorf has three sets of balanced
backs.
None of these boys can run in
the same league with Michigan’s
Tom Hannon or Don Scott of Ohio j
State. but they possess plenty of j
grcund-gaining power. No team in ,
the Big Ten is as well equipped in |
all-around backfield strength.
Depend on DeCorrevont
Without a great line, however. ,
Waldorf must turn one of his plug- j
gers into a breakaway back who I
can win ball games. DeCorrevont. !
despite his summer appendectomy, j
still Is counted on to develop into |
a dangerous runner. Stocky Bill had i
only one great game in hlin during |
his ballyhooed debut season in 1939 j
and it beat Minnesota.
Come Aarts. a fine tackle, is j
the only veteran from last year's
line, which included aii-Ameriea {258 Pupils Are Registered
Johnny Haman at center; Nick Cut-1
' Uch and Prank Young, tackles; Don | I' OF I OF III
Ouritz and Hal Mel hod, guards;
Bob Daly and Ted Orefe. ends.
Aarts and Y'ounu shared starting as-
Judson Webster Is Chosen
Senior President
CONGRATULATIONS ALL AROUND
POLES AID BRITISH—Determined to fight against Germany somewhere, these Polish youths
crossed Syrian frontier into Palestine and signed up with British. They formerly wanted to fight
under French flag, until French decided to discontinue effective war in East.
Sneezers Group Together
To Aid Hay Fever Prevention
BATTLE VIEWED
by TRIBUNE CORRESPONDENT
CALUMET, Sept. 16—At the be-
second week of;
school there was a total of 116*
in the elementary school and 142
enroled in the highschool, making
a total of 258 pupils for ihe Cal-
umet schools.
„ v, . „ . Max Van Horn, 64, a Cheyenne |
f.uards Not Seasoned Illdlan died 8unday afternoon at
First year men also will dominate M after an 111-
the guard-3 and ends. Joe Lokanr ^ of ,wo V(WS
senior reserve, is the only letterman |
guard returning. Nick Burke, 200- , Survivors are hit wife. Anna Van
........ Chicago I. u» only
sign men ts. ainninfl! of the
In the main the positions must ; u,„
he filled by sophomores. Aarts and
Alf Bauman, a Junior who was in-
jured most of last season, probably
Will handle the starting tackle jobs,
reinforced by sophomores.
newcomer labeled a. promising
sophomore among the guard candi-
dates and he and Lokanc apparently
will have to carry the load.
Jimmy—Smith „Mfi ai Butheru*,
letlerinen ends, figure as starters
Mad Bull, and a
Horn.
Funeral services were conducted
Tuesday In the Indian mission,
northwest of Calumet. Rev. Jesse
L. Brandon was In charge of the
with help from three great aopho- rite*. Burial was made n the Con
more prospects—Bob Moil and Hal cll° '
Co’.berg of Chicago and Clarence
Hasse of Hammond. Ind.
Toughest Job in the lot will fall
to Paul Hlemenz, senior center from
Buffalo, N Y.. who will try to make
the homefolk forget about Haman.
, Hainan stepped Into a regular start-
. Jhg Job as a sophomore and held it
• Villi glory for throe years.
| J After Hlemenz. there Isn’t much,
Melvern Crownover. son of Mr.
and Mrs. Arthur Crownover has
enroled in Oraceland college at
Lamoni. Iowa.
Mr and Mis Bill Cross have
announced the birth of a son. on
Monday morning. They have given
j him the name of Joe Howard.
Morris Cavlns. son of Mr and
Mrs. Henry Cavlns. and Earl Ba-
^lihough Bert Ingwerson, line coach, ; ker, son of Mrs. Maude Draper.
has his eve on sophomore Bill Ur-
inub of Chicago.
Hack field Not Deceptive
The first barkfteki probably will
Include quarterback Don Krueger,
halfbacks Red Hahnensteln and
Floyd Chambers, and fullback Don
Clason. It’s powerful but not tricky.
In the second. Waldorf probably
will combine quarterback Dink
Richards, senior honor student and
t$ttermnn; halfbacks DcCorrevant
(Did Ira Kepford. and fullback Pnul
8o|>er Ctawson. a workhorse, may
Wind up as an iron man in both
hnckflelda.
departed Monday for Fort 3111
where they will begin n year's i
training They are members of the i
national guard.
Guests Tuesday In the home of
Mr and Mrs. Chris Andersen were
Jack White and Mr and Mrs S.
P Needham of Cass Lake. Minn.
Mrs Emma Chandler of Cl< vis.
N. M Mr. and Mrs. J W Bales
were Sunday guests In the home
of Mr and Mrs, J. N Bales and j
daughter, Marjorie.
Arthur Lopez, son of Mr and i
Mrs. Augustine Lopez. Junior Lee. '
j son of Roy Ig*e, and Cecil Lucas I
BY TRIBUNE CORRESPONDENT
CKARCHE. Sept. 16—Officers of
1 the senior class of Qkarche hlgh-
i school were elected at the first busi-
ness meeting Monday morning.
| Judson Webster was elected class
I president for his fourth consecutive
j year Other officers are Herman
I Ludwig, vice president; Donald
iGrummer. secretary-treasurer; and
| Violet Maass reporter.
The senior class has an enrolment
of 18 students.
|
This class has started work on a
play, “Lindy Lou," scheduled for
presentation on Oct. 11.
Officers of the junior class are
Ted Otte. president; Juanita Schroe-
der. vice president; Coletta Garri-
son, secretary; Mary Hall, treasurer;
and Helen Foster, reporter.
The Junior class this year is the
smallest in the highschool. having an
enrolment of only nine students.
Sophomores elected Bill Themer.
president; Dorothy Orummer. vice
president; Marian Sohroeder. secre-
tary-treasurer; and Mary Louise
Kordis, reporter.
The freshman class has an enrol-
ment of 22. Officers are BUI Gar-
rison. president; Harry Hoyer, vice
president; Alma Rott. secretary;
Maxine Dow, treasurer; Lots Sehroe-
der and Valva Schroeder, reixtrters.
Initiation of the freshman class of
Holy Trinity school was conducted
. .. , Thursday evening In the school
(U.R)—Deciding thiV n .s high time |bflSfnlpnt wlth al, highschool stu-
dents and faculty members present.
After the freshmen performed the
assigned stunts, refreshments were
served.
Miss Gertrude Good of Vero
Beach. Fin., departed for her home
Storm Caves For
Schools Proposed
MeALESTER, Sept. 16—iSpecial)
—A proposal has been submitted
to the Work Propects administra-
tion to build seven Pittsburg coun-
ty rural schools with wide and com-
fortable storm shelters to protect
pupils in the event a disturbance
strikes during study hours,
j The cellars will be 10 feet wide
I and will range up to 30 feet In
j length and from seven to eight
| feet deep. They will be built of
native rock.
The project, submitted by County
j Superintendent Clarence Sanders,
plans general improvements for 11
schools and asks $24,099 WPA funds
to finance the $34,659 venture.
Work is to be completed within
six months and the program will
pay out $22,014 in wages to men
unable to find private employment.
Co-operating school districts will
share their $10,560 investment
through regular tax channels.
CHAMP MEETS CHAMP—Donald McNeill of Oklahoma City,
who won national amateur tennis title at Forest Hills, N. Y.,
congratulates Alice Marble, Californian who successfully
defended her women's crown for fourth timo.
I‘Rain Destroyer’ Fails
And Dies Of Exposure
a WAUWATOSA, Wis., Sept. 16—
CLUMSY CAT DISCOVERED SEVEN BROTHERS SERVE
HUNTINGTON, Ind.. — (U.R)—‘The CAMPBELLTCN. N. B . —(U.R)—
popular belief that cats always The distinction of having the most
land on their feet when they fall members In one family serving
was disproved here when firemen wit,h the Canadian armed forces is
were called to rescue a clumsy cat C]ajmed (>y thP Thompson family
marooned in a tree. As one of the
firemen reached fa. e»e animal. Restigouche county. Seven of
the cat. sadly lacking in ’’feline William Thompson’s sons are on
grace,” jumped to the ground,, active service with the Canadian
landing flat on its side. active service force.
i NEW DELHI. India. Sept. 16-
I (U.R)—The life duty of Bobhagmal,
I inherited from his father, was to
! keep the rain away from the village
j of Tajjan, near New Delhi.
When the village was threatened
with a furious storm, Sobhagniul
climbed a neighboring hill and be-
gan uttering wild imprecations
against the elements and bran-
dishing his sword.
Nothing happened except Sob-
hagmal got wet and died of ex-
posure.
Now Sobhagmal’s son lias inher-
ited the job.
to do something more than bless
' you when you sneeze, hay fever
sufferers here have banded together
in Ihe Wauwatosa Pollenizers club.
They want It understood that
the club has nothing to do with
gardening and that Its function is day'~afte'rY "ltf-day visit with
1 strictly anti-sneeze. The charter
I members, of whom there now are
said to be about 35 embracing rep-
resentatives from four states, are
not just sure yet. what can be done
to scourge hay fever from the
land. They plan to explore what
resources of Initiative and mutual
comfort their union affords at a
meeting to be held Sept. 5.
The charter members assembled
for their organization meeting Aug
15 with scarcely a ka-choo, but
they expected to be In mid-season
form by Sept. 5. They may decide
her uncle and aunt. Mr. and Mrs.
Left Knecht.
Mr. nnd Mrs. Fred Fuchs of West
McHenry, 111., departed for their
home Wednesday after a visit of
several days with the Smith families.
Rev. and Mrs. T. C. Otte and
family. Rev. and Mrs. E. H. Lechner
and daughter. Mildred, of Blackwell,
Rev. and Mrs. Walter Geishler and
sons of I^eotl, Kan., enjoyed a fam-
ily picnic south of Okarohe Mon-
day evening.
Miss Loretta Schroeder. daughter
of Mrs. Clara Schroeder. departed
on that date a uch momentous I Wwtiwafbur for MNteeMr where aba
questions as the establishment of I wi]1 aUend Oklahoma A. and M.
a revolving fund for supplying j colleRP thlg term.
however. Ik Mr. and \irs Ben Brueggen spent
Wednesday afternoon In Yukon with
their son-in-law and daughter. Mr.
and Mrs. William Wedman.
Sister Zenona of Enid. Sister Mng-
deline of Tulsa and Sister Mary
Ann of Wichita. Kan., departed
Wednesday for their homes after a
visit of several days with their fa- j
(her, John Grellner. and sister. Miss
Catherine Grellner.
Still a third effective backfield
can be formed with Dick Erdlltz,
Erwin Madsen. Ted Riley and George
Henson Riley Is the only sophomore
With much hope of crashing Into any
combination
But these players may have no
place to run except Into the arms
of opposing tackier*
The schedule:
Oct. ft—Northwestern at Syracuse.
Oct. 12—Ohio State at Northwest-
ern.
Oct 19—Northwestern »t Wise on- j
stn.
^Oct. 26-Indiana at Northwestern
*-Nov 2—Minnesota at Northwest-
Mi. •
Nov 9—Illinois at Northwestern.
Nov. 16—Northwestern ut Mich-
igan.
Nov. 23—Notre Dame at North-
western
STEEL HAT —Wearing steel
helmet and gating through
binoculars, Prime Minister
Churchill - of Britain watches
progress of air battle between
his side and Natis over Dover,
on Britain's southeast coast.
Dover has been much bombed.
Passed by British censor.
handkerchiefs. This,
considered only as a stop-gag
measure to fill the breach until
steps of more permanent nature
can be taken, according to Big
Sneeze David Rowe.
With the current belated season
of heavy explosive sneezing barely
started. Rowe already had a me-
tallic edge on his voice as he ex-
plained the club’s ambitions to
| expand nationally for greater ef-
j fectiveness In control and preven-
tive measures. He said a physician
would be asked to advise the club j
I In Its formulation of a program I
for relief of hay fever suffering.
Possibilities for effective nppli-1
cation of the club’s influence were
suggested at Its first meeting, ac-
cording to Rowe, when a man ]
whose wife suffered from the tnal- j ^ rolnpany
ady petitioned the club to persuade campa|Rn wm tell America
municipal officials to have the (hn( clipstprfl(,ld ls ..the tmoker’s
weeds cut on a vacant lot adjacent because It combines milder,
Uo their home She promptly was Ugte ,n 0I1P gttUg.
I enroled as a member.
; Such a program has been pur*
Famous Persons
In Cigaret Series
Many famous iiersonalltles appear j
In the Chesterfield cigarot cam-
paign for early fall, released this j |
week by IJggett and Myers Tobae-
departed Monday for California
where they are stationed with the
air corps In San Pedro. \__
Mrs. C. W Draper departed
Thursday evening 'o spend several liPCOFu Growth Shown
weeks with her daughter. Mrs Mux o,, VVatoniTa’s Library
Morrison and Infant son in Green- 3 _ 3
vllle. 111.
Mrs. Enrl-S'Ulth, daughter. Karen.
Mrs E. P. Smith and daughter, Al-
ma. were Thursday visitors o!
Mr and Mrs Rosroe smith In
Kingfisher |
| sued for some time by some north
em Wisconsin communities which
! advertise themselves as havens for
| hay fever nddlcts. There, Boy
cooler, better taste
f.vlng smoke”
From the screen world. Fred I
MncMurrny, Robert Rapelye and
Georgette McKee "star" for Chest-
erfield Heading the list of sports)
celebrities are Gene Snrazen. great,
IS* br°hackmglToa?llywe'^!'lolf *inmplon »nd Sid Luckman.
WATONOA Sept 16—iSpeciftlt
-Tills city can boast of the fastest
1 growing Work Projects administra-
tion library In the state, according
to Josephine Paxton, stale WPA
bearing pollen Irritants. Rowe
foresaw the possibility of general
extension of this service for super-
sensitive noses
"It's a new organization
naturally we haven’t begun to ex-
plore its potentialities lor helping
hay fever sufferers yet,” Rowe ex-
plained ”We are convinced that
together we can do more than we
could separately in Initiating and
The least
All-America football hero.
Three pretty avtntrtces from the
newly organized Women Flyers of
America and a cheerful world
, j series baseball advertisement corn-]
plete the schedule.
library supervisor.
i llnnJ lwwi.« WPA I Thr library’s April report showed j carrying out a program
j IiDIhI IhNlIl r «r ” I rt _ :jk7 registered readers. By the end
Job Gets Iiiti Majority of June the number sky rocketed
7- to 1 t:t(> dropped back tO 1,329 by
LINDEAY. Sept 16—'Special)—i u1e pnt| of July and the September j other officers of
One of the biggest majorities ever , IT|xin Is expected to be around! Miss Virginia Drolsbagen. vice big
voted a public Improvement bond, j 500 based on the first 23 days sneeze, and Harvey Lelser. chief
isaue in this section of Oklahoma j that showed 1.221, I crier. In private life Rowe pursues
Mrs. S A. Curtis of Marlow Is |
spending a few days in the homes ■
of her sisters, Mrs. Jess R. Smith.
133 North L avenue, and Mrs. C
L. Duff. 108 South M avenue.
we can do Is give each other mu-
tual comfort and maybe provide alright hand raised In greeting I
few laughs ” , Rnwe warns members not to raise
the club are the rigid Imiul too high to avoid
International complications.
The. club chose as Its official I
flower the ragweed, reputedly the |
was recorded
when this broom-
the world decided !
Look and Loarn
1 How many people In tire United
males rrweh voting age each year?
2 What common English word
means a color, and also means a
noise? t
3 What president of the United
States had his eon-ln-law as a
member of the cabinet?
4 What t» an octogertartan?
■ ft What state of the union Is a
FI mi nisi 1 word meaning "red?”
ANRWERH
t. Approximately 2,000000 peoplr
brrnnie 2t years of age each year
. 2 Hue
8 Woodrow Wilson had his son-
in-law, William O MrAdno, as
secretary of the treasury.
4 A person between 80 and 90
years of age
U Colorado
A still greater registration Is
corn capllol of the world derided) al,tlc|PHtrd when the fall school
234 to 28 In favor of a $0,ft00 Issue. lprm u lnl0 ful) gwlng
Tin* funds will be used to build
‘.''"'mi 1 "inniimlty building
through Work Projects adminiatra- Delay I'ails To Keep
a newspaper career Miss Drols-
hagen. secretarial duties, and Lei-
.scr sells insurance With them as
founders of the club was Marianne
MacRnc. an Interior decorator who
abdicated as big sneeze because of
til'll MU \VI*.\ Itehillri Schedule!the press ot other duties The
The building will house all city -----, 4 T ! youngest member to date Is 6-year-
otflces. including the fire depart- ELDORADO. Okla Kept 16— old Billy Walters Although of
mrnt. will have a commodious 1 Special)—In spite of six weeks)tender years, the club certified
library, a, general assembly room suspension of work caused by bgd him as a full-fledged aneeaer In-
and an auditorium seating .500 Weather, Eldorado’s $45,000 grade formal meetings sit planned every
persons school and auditorium built by the. Thursday. In season
Work Project* administration was j Membership costs 2ft cent* per
ready for use when the fall term 1 person, entitling the enrollee to a
of school began card embellished with a figure in
______ Not only that but WPA com- full snee*e, The club’s official
Smith owes A 86 2-3-: of the Plcted the building 20 days .head norlMtiul el-
lie iiwo n and he owes C of lhP original schedule Construe- Index finger hotlamitally ex
hr oars B and nr own u - -.......lPndrd undPr the noae with the
A Problem A Day
6 It was finished
sum he owes
75", ot what he owes A. What 0°n began Jan
does he owe B If what he owes A «l « cost approximately $2,500 lean
1. $80 more Ilian what he owes C?WPA planned to s|iend of Its
ANSWER authorization
$480 Explanation—Let 100’; equal The building Include* eight das*,
what hr owes B. multiply 0 78 by rooms, study hall and three office*.
0 08 2-3; subtract this result from The auditorium has a seating rapn-
most prolific disseminator of lrrl-1
fating pollen
"Our flower Is symbolic of what
we hope to eliminate rather than I
an aspiration of perpetuation,”
Rowe explained
Persons afflicted with alnus and)
asthmatic maladies also will be
welcomed to the dub as cousins ot
the hay fever sufferer. States al-
ready represented In the member-
ship are Wisconsin. Illinois. South
Carolina and Louisiana_
0 68 2-3; divide Into 80
dtv of 560
TYPEWRITERS AND
ADDING MACHINES
HALF — RENTALS — REPAIRS
New and Rerond It lowed
HENRY BEHNE
Typewriter Dep’t. Pliom IM
Virginia Dove
Refloat of Dance
And
Personality
All Type* of Dancing--Children j
and Adult*. Child Cultore. Health
Classes
ENROLL NOW
PIIONE 677-1
j
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It'* a new comic cartoon feature that occupie*
a high ipot in the heavens of hilarity. It offers
the kind of nonsense and stuff your sense of humor
will go for hook, line and linker.
For some time Abner Dean’i has been one of the
brightest names in the brightest magazines pub-
lishing comic cartoons. Now newspapers have
nabbed him to do a feature for them—for you.
We're sure you'll like it. So be sure to start it
MONDAY, SEPT. 23
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Dyer, Ray J. The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 49, No. 171, Ed. 1 Monday, September 16, 1940, newspaper, September 16, 1940; El Reno, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc923911/m1/2/: accessed April 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.