The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 50, No. 64, Ed. 1 Wednesday, May 14, 1941 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.
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POUR
EL RENO (OKLAJ DAILY TRIBUNE
WEDNESDAY, MAY 14,1941
i
The El Reno Daily Tribune MFRMFN
A Blue Ribbon Newspaper Serving a Blue Ribbon Community UIIUll Lll IU vlllLIl
SENDING FORTH ANOTHER DOVE
Issued daily except Saturday from 207 South Rock Island avenue,
fend entered as second-class mail matter under the act of March 3, 1879,
KAY J. DYER
Editor and Publisher
BUDGE IIARI.E
News Editor
DEAN WARD
Advertising Manager
The ASSOCIATED PRES8 is exclusively entitled to the use of re-
publicatlon of all the news dispatches credited to it or not credited by
this paper, and also to all the local news therein.
All rights of publication of special dispatches herein also are reserved.
Dolores Dobry Is Feted
At Yukon
MEMBER
SOUTHERN NEWSPAPER otfij
PUBLISHERS ASS’N.
MEMBER
OKLAHOMA PRESS
ASSOCIATION
DAILY SUBSCRIPTION RATES BY MAIL IN CANADIAN AND
BY CARRIER ADJOINING COUNTIES
One Week --------------- $ .15 Three Months _____ $1.50
Three Months ---------------$1.75 Six Months _ $3,00
Oae Year $7.00 One Year ____________$5.00
Including Sales Tax
WEDNESDAY, MAY 14, 1941
HE CAN NEITHER UNDERSTAND NOR APPRECIATE: Verllv 1
Say unto you, except a man be born of water ami the spirit he eannot
enter into the kingdom of God.—John 3:5.
Plow Points
BY TOM M. MARKS
Oklahoma's County Agrnt At latrge
QTILLWATER, May 14 iSpe-
^ eialt— Miss Gertrune Hove, No-
wata comity home demonstration
agent, writes:
"A group of Dlnmond Point
Sanitation is the clue to greater
profits from the poultry flocks.
* * *
Turkey growers In the United
Stute.s, us a whole, report plans
community residents met this to raise about 3 percent fewer
spring and'organized a home deni- poults this year than last.
onstration club. These women had
been interested In home demon-
* *
., Out of every dollar the Arner-
stration club work through con- housew,fe spenl for food ln
tacts made willi club members ul| average'of 42 cents went
from other comrnunlti. and the t0 lhe ,ttnner compared wUn 41
publicity given our programs This ,,„ts ln ,93„ ,111(1 cents ,n
group has eight members m pie. - )9jo
ent but hopes to enlarge." # * -g
That was life mult of a demon- 1 M lhp ^,lnnlnf of 1941 therp
stratlon, the very loundatlon of ! w, r*\ lW° bRtoB of ro,,ton ln thp
the extension service do. thou world r,,r evPrv b,llp llkplV to
and do likewise " ju'sed durl,,K lllp VP,‘r-
I have.seen so many great things „
done bv this same demonstration, I TllP oddlp1' ***** to bp ',ro'
and you never know where it Is) ^tpd from lo,,« !it>,lr*,,Vs bV •
going to end. It is like droppln: «""* “* 1"’p, hp“d' bv stron«
a pebble into a still pool Ripples
start out and keep going and
going
Tills demonstration idea is real-
ly a parable, which Is said to be
the best wav to teach or Instruct
It teaches by comparison, which
Is a parable.
I remember visiting a demon-
strator and good friend I looked
up at his house and said, "Harry
why don't you pahu your house?"
His answer was that painters
charged such high pin r he could
not afford it.
I told him he could do the
painting himself.
He got some paint and a brush,
and I went out and showed him
how to mix the paint and spread
It on He first painted the buck
part of the house, and by that time
he had developed enough skill
to make: a reul decent Job on the
rest.
lugs with closely spaced burs; lie
needs to be protected from stoves
and tile fireplace by good fire
screens; from slippery floors by 11
firm Hour covering such as lino-
leum.
BY TRIBUNE CORRESPONDENT
YUKON. May 14 - Mrs. J. L.
Summers assisted her daughter,
Mrs. George Newell. Jr., In enter-
taining at a kitchen and pantry
shower Friday night honoring Miss
Dolores Dobry, who will become a
bride on June 3.
Tlie decorations were in u pastel
motif.
Gifts were placed ln a large May
basket centering a gaily decorated
dining table.
Tiny May baskets were given as
favors.
Guests were Miss Mary Maly,
Miss Ellen May, Miss Doris Phil-
lips, Mrs Clifford Barrett of Okla-
homa City, Mrs. Joe E, Dobry, Miss
Patsv Dobry, Mrs. A. F. Dobry,
Mrs. H. W Ooudy, Mrs. W. C.
Weller, Mrs. Alan Norwood, Mrs
Lottie Christian, Mrs Joe Alvurez,
Mrs. Jean Phillips, Miss Helen
Margaret Brown, Miss Thera Tun-
nell.
Miss Eileen Kelly, Miss Betty
Moore. Miss Weymouth Salllnger,
Miss Phyllis Tunnell, Miss Evelyn
Graham, Miss Mary Jane Adding-
ton, Miss Grace Knox. Miss Flor-
ence Graham. Miss Beulah Paz-
ourek. MLxs Jo Hollingsworth and
Miss Jane Clapper.
Many other parlies are planned
lor Miss Dobry
Mr. and Mrs C. C. Coyle and
daughter, Velvu Jo. Mr. and Mrs
Roger Worsham and son, FRiger
Keith. Mr and Mrs. V. M Comp
ton were Sunday dinner guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Holmes and
family I11 Edmond.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Johnson and
son, Gary, of Oklahoma City were
Sunday dinner guests ot Mr. John-
son's parents, Mr and Mrs. Claude 1
Johnson,
Randell E. Mason, superintend-
11AY PM
EVENT
STORIES
IN STAMPS
Ray Laughlin Is Honored
On Anniversary
Neumann Named
Railway Surgeon
ent of the Gould CCC camp, spent 1 ,
the week-end with Mrs. Mason and AnnoUncemen‘ has been made of
his son, Wallace, at Yukon. | th«* appointment of Dr. Milton
EXPORTS PAGE
RAIMI) GROWTH
HAN PAULO, Brazil May 14-(U.R)
The city of Sao Paulo, described
by its authorities as "the great-
est Industrial center of Latin
America," has grown In population
from 31.000 In 1870 to 1.380.000
In 1941
Tills expansion among cities of
the western hemisphere is exceed-
ed only by Izis Angeles.
Sao Pnulo is situated at an alti-
tude of about 2,600 feet on a
plateau of the Brazilian coastal
His neighbors said. "Well, 11 Nnge. accessible to Santos, Its
Harry cun jmlnt his house, I can seaport, by a twisting rond that
paint, mine." zig-zags up the mountain sides, and
They did. and It was not long by a railway with such extreme
until efery home In the neigh- gradients that steam - operated
borhood was painted. I cable lines are used for about
This was Ju t a beginning ol'seven miles of Its course,
the ripples, lhe people began to j The majority of Brazil's coffee,
stialglilcn lences, straighten barns, j rott0n and other agricultural prod-
dean up premises, and doing othr. , uclg and n part of 1|8 manu.
things to make their places cor- faclured „Mlds pnfw throURh 8>h>
respond with their houses. Paulo for (.xpor,
Yard lights, controlled from the ®*° P|,u'° has received eighth
house nnd from outside, add much ranking In point of population
to the safety and convenience ol among western hemisphere cities,
the farm lumlly. and third ranking among cities of
Light Is important In and around i-atm America. During the past 10
farm buildings when there are years the city has grown at the
sick or injured animals to care rule of 42 percent annually, com -
lor, or in rase ol lire or to ills-(pared with New York's population
cover prowlers. growth of .9 percent a year.
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Kroutll
left Tuesday for a week's business
trip to Chicago. IB. Mrs. Kroutil's
mother, Mrs. J. C. Frerking. and
aunt, Mrs. J. O Morehead, of
Geary, will remain with their
daughter, Kathryn liae, while they
are away.
Sundny guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Carl Cone and family and Mrs.
Cone's mother, Mrs. Minnie Mc-
Curty, were Mr. jand Mrs. J. N
Roberson and Miss Glen Evelyn
McCarty of El Remo, Mr. and Mrs.
Knox Glass of Oklahoma City, Mr.
and Mrs. William McCurtv and
dnughter, Tula, ol Norman and
Bob McCarty of Oklahoma City.
Mr. and Mrs. Fcrol Osclmer
spent the week-end in Edmond
with Mr Oschnrr's parents. Mr
and Mrs. W C. Oschner.
Mrs Mary D. McClure and Mrs.
Olen Cornwall spent the week-end
in Oklahoma City with Mr and
Mrs. Rex Ornham.
Neumunn as general surgeon for
the El Reno division of the Rock
Island railway.
Dr. Neumann received Ills med-
ical training In Creignton univer-
sity at Omaha. Neb., and at the
University of Oklahoma In No»-
mun. He served as house physician
at 8t. Anthony's hospital ln Okla-
homa City a year, and took post
graduate training in surgery at
Tulane university ln New Orleans.
La., Northwestern university at
Chicago, Cook County Graduate
School of Medicine at Chicago and
Crile clinic at Cleveland. Ohio.
For the past 10 years Dr. Neu-
mann has been engaged ln general
medical und surgery practice at
Ckarche. coming to El Reno six
months ago to assume the private
practice and hospital duties of Dr.
Gustavus D Funk when the latter
entered active service In the army
medical corps.
New Findings On
Insanity Revealed
VftASHINGTON, May 14-iSpe-
ciali—So much has been said
| of late about the lack of pre-
paredness In which the United
j States finds Itself that the 83-
I year-old chairman of the house
appropriations committee, Ed Tav-
EVANSTON, 111., May 14—(U.R)
—Changes In the classification of
insanity are predicted by two
Northwestern university psycholo-
gists who have completed new
type studies with mental asylum
patients.
Dr. Gravdon L. Freeman and
Julian Pathman reported finding
little difference between the excit-
able patient who requires a strait-
jacket and the apathetic one "who
sits dead to the world in a corner."
Internal reactions of both persons
to a shock stimulus, the psycholo-
lor of Colorado also Buell Snyder,, lsts sald Rrr almost slmllar.
chairman of the war department „Wp found .. Preeman said ..that
approprlatioR sub-committee, and Llertrical charges due to persplra-
Juck May chairman of the mil - Uon m> the palm of the hand_
tniy affairs committee, recently ■ d lndlcation of emotional
v sited several of the largest air-1 nrousal_are the same for both
plane factories and other Indus-, to such stlmuli as pistol shols
t ml plants upon which he United and Uu, askln of per8ona, ques.
States is depending largely to speed (ions
BEHIND THE SCENES
IN WASHINGTON
labor rides on crest of DEFENSE WAVE —
IU T RAD SUB MAY SINK ALL PREVIOUS CAINS
BY PETER EPSON
NEA Nervier Staff Correspondent
DOWN MEMORY LANE
\y ASH1NGTON.—Longtime ob-
servers of the labor move-
ment in the United States, view-
ing 4lie national labor picture
from the capital today with par-
ticular focus on developments of
the last few weeks, are in practi-
cal agreement that John L. Lewis
nnd the C. I.
May 14. ml
Miss Harvey Thompson, home demonstration agent, Mrs.
C. T. I'uvy and Mrs. Hugh Thompson will attend sessions
of the garden judging school of this district in Chickashn
Friday.
Applications from the rural schools to the city schools
which are being received daily from the rural students at
the office of the county superintendent probably will total
BOH this year.
'Oklahoma’s “1031 Hall of Fame” list has been an-
nounced In (lie Oklahoma Memorial association, of which
Mrs. Finnk Korn, 912 South Hoff avenue, is president. Mrs
Korn not only is president of the organization, but also wns
n member of the committee that selected six citizens of the
state for their services to the state and to humanity for this
>honor. • • * f | II V|lff
Mr. and Mrs. Henry von Tungeln, southwest of El Reno,
have announced the birth of a son weighing nine and one-
half pounds. The infant was born Wednesday, May 13.
Ellis V. Gregory, assistant county attorney, substituted
for his father, Dr. M. S. Gregory, of Okluhomu City, Wed-
nesday night when he presented the citizenship medal a'
the Union City graduation exercises. George Leslie Segress.
who was salutatorian of his class, was the graduate receiv-
ing the honor. » • f ’
Two students from Kl Reno are among the 40 upper-
classmen of the University of Oklahomu who appear in r
special “Well Known SoonerV section of The Sooner, uni-
versity yearbook, of which Ray Bannister, also of El Reno,
is editor. The students are Lawrence “Lorry" Meyer, son
of Dr ntul Mrs. Harry A. Meyer, 1203 South Barker avenue
and Dirk Pearce, son of Mr. nnd Mrs, C. A. Pearce, 301
North Evans avenue. Bannister is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
J. H. Bannister. 412 South Macomb avenue.
Edfton
O. today have
more strength
and better posi-
tions than they
had at the be-
ginning of the
defense effort
and that the
tendency is all
In the direction
of the labor
movement be-
coming strong-
er, rather than
weaker, as de-
fense produc-
tion continues.
Whelhei 01 not
you like that point of view, it is
a hard one to disprove.
Admitting one bad strike in a
key defense industry might throw
the whole labor movement for a
loss from which recovery would
be difficult, labor lenders still
point to a number of factors
which indicate the increosed
strength of the unions:
1. Labor ha* not lost one strike
since the defense elTort begun.
There have been settlements In
which the unions did not get all
they were asking for, nnd formu-
la settlements which were com-
promises between labor nnd man-
agement.
2. Wage increases to labor arc
now estimated at about $480 mil-
lion annually, pmrtirnlly all ob-
tained through union bargaining.
3. Both the cause und tUe ef-
fect of these increases has been
a big gain in union memberships.
C. I. O. la claiming live million
members, und so is A. F. of L.
Both me Increases of more than
a million members since 1939,
4. While this total of 10 million
♦rganued workers represent* only
a third or n fourth of the non-
agricultural workers in the coun-
try, Bureau of Labor Statistics re-
ports that two-thirds of the wmk-
ers in rubber, aluminum, mari-
time, steel nnd electrical equip-
ment industries, half the workers
in shipbuilding and metal mining
industries, und u third of the
workers in aircraft industries are
covered by union agreements.
5. Companies which have had
long-standing policies for an open
shop, such as Bethlehem and Ford,
have been brought to union nego-
tiation. The new aircraft industry,
largely unorganized a year ago,
has been a fertile held for union
expansion. Organization drives
are on everywhere.
8. Concessions which had never
been grunted before, such as vaca-
tions with pay, have been tncor-
poruted in some of the new agree-
ments. And the new contract
which John L. Lewis negotiated:
for the United Mine Workers Un-
ion, with dollnr-a-day increases,
and elimination of the southern
differential, Is being hailed as the
most remarkuble collective bar-
gaining agreement ever achieved.
up Its preparedness program.
The venerable chairman, as well
as other members of his committee,
j were more than pleased with what
j they saw. Especially was the com-
| mlttee gratified at the marked
j progress made In the mass pro-
duction of bombing and pursuit
planes.
# # *
They reported that airplane fac-
tories now are turning out pursuit
planes that cruise 525 miles an
i hour. These are faster, more
I powcrlul and belter armored than
anything that either England or
1 Germany has.
They also report that Uncle
Sam's latest bombers weigh more
"Psychiatrists long have believed
that the withdrawn, inhibited pa-
tient Is out of touch with the out-
side world, but our finding Indi-
cates that these patients are aware
of such stimuli but fan to react
to them externally. The difference
between maniacs and the schizoph-
renics largely is in the amount
of Inhibition exerted over the out-
ward expression of emotion."
These findings. Freeman said,
argue for shock therapy—the tech-
nique of Jolting withdrawn patients
Into recognition of the outside
world.
"We found a definite relation-
ship between the length of a per-
son's stay In a mental hospital
und the amount of energy he mob-
BY TRIBUNE CORRESPONDENT
CALUMET. May 14—Ray Laugh-
lin was surprised pleasantly Thurs-
day evening when relatives gather-
ed at his home to celebrate his
birthday anniversary.
Dinner was served to Mr. and
Mrs. Noland Smith and daughter,
Peggy Wright, of El Reno, Mr
and Mrs. French Laughltn, daugh-
ters, Ellen Jean and Elolse, Mr.
and Mrs. W. H. Penwrlght, "hnd
sons. Billy, Jackie. Larry and
Charles, Sam Dunn, Mrs. Ray
Laughlin and children, Beverly
and Ronald.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Sand, Mr.
and Mrs. Harold Sand and daugh-
ter, Sharon Jo, visited In Rocky
Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Harvey McCain
and son of Bridgeport, former
Calumet residents, were Sunday
evening guests In the home of
Mr. and Mrs. F. E. Hall.
Thomas J. Hurst, postmaster at
Calumet, spent several days last
week attending the Missouri state
postmasters’ meeting, to which
postmasters in eight adjacent
states were invited. James A. Far-
ley, former postmaster general, was
a special guest speaker. The ses-
sions were conducted In Kansas
City.
Rev. R. E. Roach, pastor of the
Christian church, for a year and
a half, moved Friday with his
family to Vlci, where he will as-
sume duties as pastor.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Rollins
of San Diego, Calif., were guests
last week in the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Jeff Pritner and family, Mr.
and Mrs, John Pritner and son,
Mr, and Mrs. George Kennedy and
family, Mr. and Mrs. H. B. Prit-
ner and family and other relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. Rollie Hogan, son,
Darrell, and daughter Jacqueline,
of Shawnee were the house guests
last week of Mr. and Mrs. O.
Daughety and family.
Miss Marjean Scott spent the
week-end in Oklahoma City with
her uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Doerfler.
Miss Nora Belle Schiei of Okla-
homa City spent the week-end
with her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Fred Schlel.
Mr. and Mrs. Bud Stas, Mrs.
Florence Blair and son, Eldon
were Sunday guests of Mr. and
Mrs Kenneth Thompson nnd sons
of Oklahoma City.
* Sunday dinner guests in the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Will Combs
and soft, Billy, were Mr. and Mrs
Sam Hulbert of El Reno.
Descendont of Incas
Tried to Restore Empire
rFHE 10-year administration 1
Andres Santa Cruz, picturi
on the Bolivian stamp above, w
one of the most brilliant in tl
history of the Latin American n
public. Reforms which he inst
tuted placed Bolivia upon a fir
basis for future development.
Descended from Atahuallpa, la
of the Inca emperors through h
mother, Santa Cruz received h
military training in the Spani!
army, but later adopted the p<
triot cause and gained distinctic
in the struggle for independenc
He headed Bolivar’s Council (
state, governed Peru during tl
Liberator’s absence, served ;
minister to Chile. He was electe
president of Bolivia in 1828.
Santa Cruz gave Bolivia 11
legal code, established universi
ties at La Paz and Cochambambi
But his ambition ruined him.
In 1836 he united Peru and Bo
livia in a confederation, name
himself “Supreme Protector.
Chile declared war, broke the con
federation and sent Santa Cm
into exile. -
• DAILY LESSON
IN ENGLISH
WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: I
not say, "What kind of a hat
It?” Omit a.
OFTEN MISPRONOUNCE1
Theater. Pronounce the-a-ter, e
in see, a as in ask unstressed, e :
| in her, accent first syllable.
OFTEN MISSPELLED: Device
contrivance). Devise (to plan;
bequeath), pronounce de-vlz.
SYNONYMS: Wayward, capric
ous. unruly, refractory.
WORD STUDY: “Use a woi
three times and It Is yours." L
us Increase our vocabulary by mai
terlng one word each day. Today
word: IMPUGN; to attack t
words or arguments; to contrt
diet. “The truth hereof I wi
' not rashly Impugn, or overbold:
affirm."—Peacham.
• LOOK AND LEARN
• DARLINGTON
R. C. Shlflett was ln Geary on
business Friday.
Mary Frances Blggman called on
Marcella Loganbtll Monday.
Allen Loganblll was a Sunday
afternoon visitor ln the Shlflett
home.
1. What three presidents of tt
United States were married 1
office?
2. What are the young of tt
following called: (at frog, <t
goose, (c) elephant, <d> hog?
3. What bird travels from tt
Arctic circle to the Antarctic ctrcl
11.000 miles?
4 What Is the 20th wedding ar
nlversary called?
5. Which Inland body of wat<
has the greatest percentage of sa
of any ln the world?
ANSWERS
1. Cleveland, Tyler and Wllsoi
2. (a) Tadpole, ib> gosling, <(
calf, id) pig.
3 The Arctic tern.
4 China.
5. The Dead sea.
than 80 tons, and cany 37 tons I
(of bombs. These giant planes will i hlzed to meet the demands of the
'cruise more than 9,000 miles with-1 m,lpr wor*d." Freeman said,
out refueling and have a wing 1 3 his, Patman pointed out, means
()NE issue that has not been
mentioned since the A F of
L. nfid C. I. O. conventions last
November is the matter of peace
between the two groups. It’s more
remote now than ever, ulthoiiHi)
there has been only one minor
C. I. O.-A. F. of L, jurisdictional
strike.
Both groups are independently
strong today nnd they don't have
to unile. And from labor's point
of view, there Is no more reason
why there should not be two la-
bor groups than there Is for not
having two employer groups, Na-
tional Association of Manufac-
turers and the U. S. Chutnbet of
Commerce.
So labor rides high. By step-
ping out of C. I. O. leadership on
the Roosevelt Issue, John Lewis
lias made Phil Murrny as a labor
leader. If labor continue* Its gain,
watch for Munuy's prediction:
"When labor becomes powerful
enough, government will accord It
lit* light to participate.”
spread of 212 feet from tip to
tip. These new streamlined bomb-
ers carry more thun twice the
tonnage oi bombs and are con-
I siderablv larger and faster than
j anything the Nazis yet have pro-
duced.
* * *
Now the president Is demanding
that mass production of these
giant bombers, as well as the
lighter ones, must be speeded up
He also hus demanded the speed-
ing up of the production of onr
new 27-ton tanks now being made
lor the U. 8 army.
Twenty-four hour shifts have
been placed In
building yards and all Indications
are Mint we will need more and
faster ships If and when we atari
convoying our materials to Bri-
tain, which now Is a foregone
conclusion.
* * *
Up to dnte one member of the
U. S senate und two members of
the house have Indicated that
they favor a declaration of war
against Germany nnd Immediately
sending another American cxpcdl
I tlonarv force to Europe
None of the three belligerent1
statesmen, however, who are In-
sisting we go over nnd clean up
on Hitler some morning before
breakfast, hits 11 son of his own
to send and each of the three 1*
In the das* oi the outmoded
destroyers that the president re-
nently traded to Oreat Britain
for air and naval bases—they are
nil "over-aged "
Mint patients, to be treated suc-
cessfully, must be jolted into
awareness or their chances for cure
become increasingly less. The shock
treatments, he siua, usually afe
applied medically ln the form Of
Injections and help develop the
patient's latent "energy” with suffi-
cient foree to cause its break-
through Into action.
• PROBLEM A DAY
A haystack Is In the form of a
cylinder 15 ft. In diameter and 7
ft. high, surmounted by a cone
10 ft. high. How many tons of
the naval ship 1 ))ny are there In the stuck, allow-
ing 512 cu. ft to the ion?
ANSWER
3 57 'minus) ton* Explanation—
Square of 15; multiply by
3.1416 (pi); multiply by 7; to
this add the product of the square
of '* of 15, 3.1416. 10, and 1-3;
divide the result by 512.
FOOD FISH
HORIZONTAL
1 Pictured food
fish.
7 It belongs to
the family
Answer to Previous Panic
12 Tiny.
13 To exude.
15 Genus of
*heep.
16 Steaks.
18 Leguminous
plant.
20 Person
opposed.
22 SVcret
arrangement.
17 Undermines.
19 Compass point
(abbr.).
21 Catching thig
fish is an 1
important
Newfoundland
23 Diving-bird.
27 Plant part.
29 Evergreen I
shrub.
32 Christmas
L carol.
_2 3-* Window.
36 Decorated.
VERTICAL 39 Ocean.
2 To be in debt. $1 To pierce with
3KT"° 1
tir*- “is*
5 Therefore. 52 Handle.
53 Thin.
44 Form of
supplication.
24 Greek war god 46 Spike of corn.
2*Nve plus five. 47Andi
26 Doctor (abbr.) Q1 .
28 Bobbin. 19 olrl'
30 Road (abbr.). 80 Kingdom.
31 Electrified 54 Climbing rose. 6 Quoits’pin.
partide. 87 Taunt. 7 Trappings. 54 Constellation.
33 Song for one. 59 To peel. 6 To accomplish. 56 Inlet.
35 Surf duck. 60 Goddess of 9 Bugle plant. 58 Portuguese I
37 Tennis fence. discord. 10 Nick. coin J
38 Pack beast. 62 Wiser. 11 Flower. 59 Postscript “
40 Passages. 64 Dug. 14 Fanatical (abbr.).
42 Measure of 65 It is found In devotion. 61 Street (abbr.),
urea. abundance in 16 Its liver oil 1$ 63 Red Cross
43Coterle. the North—— used for-. (abbr.),
HOW IIE STAYS IIT
TUI BA t/M)—-At 89 years of age
H J. Porter keep* In trim by
walking 13 utiles dally.
• BARBS
rPHE best guide book to consult
1 while touring is the pocketbook.
« • •
National Cotton Week is May
16 (0 24, We hope to see cotton
batten a thousand,'
• • •
Germany passed up It* custo-
mary May Day celebration thia
year. Not a bad Idea to wait until
they’re positive they have some-
thing to celebrate.
• • •
The quickest may for a doctor
to loir a patient it tall her it
toas only a minor operation.
• • •
Women who roaet others we not
always good cook*. Jtt
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Dyer, Ray J. The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 50, No. 64, Ed. 1 Wednesday, May 14, 1941, newspaper, May 14, 1941; El Reno, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc923930/m1/4/?q=j+w+gardner: accessed July 7, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.