The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 59, No. 168, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 13, 1950 Page: 2 of 8
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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fci Keno (Okla.) Daily lYiDune
Mq rket I Lines hr You
Wednesday, September 13,19®)
I Tuesday at St. Anthony hospital In
Oklahoma City.
Services wlU be held
Cherokee. 'Burial will
Creek.
Survivors Include his wife. Mary
Ruth Creek, and a son, Richard
Lee, of the home in Oklahoma City.
SERVICES ARE HELD
FOR MeCAIN INFANT
Services for Gerald Michael Mc-
Cain, infant son of Mr. and Mrs.
B. R. McCain, 200 >4 South Williams
avenue, were held at 4 p. m. Tues-
day in the chapel at Benson funeral
Quads Pass Physicals
CARRIES A SPARE
CONCORD, N. H.—(U.PJ—When
l«muel Sheep reported to police
the loss of*a wallet containing
*1,344, he assured them that “my
other wallet" containing $240 was
safe in another pocket. i
Permit Is Issued
To Repair Home
Two building permits were issued
| Tuesday by Miss Ethel Dowell, cltv
clerk. y 3
One was issued to B. T. Conway.
510 Sunset drive, for repairs to his
residence. The repairs will cost an
estimated $600 and are to be com-
pleted Oct. 1. The Conway home
was damaged last week when an
automobile made a left turn and
ran onto the porch and Into a
Thursday in With Flying Colors
HOUBTON, Tex., Sept. IS—(U.R»
—The nation’s only male quad-
ruplets. the Perricone brothers of
Beaumont, Tex., are In the army
today for all practical purposes, but
they are still hoping they'll stay
together and won’t be assigned to
duty In the infantry.
The four, Anthony, Bernard,
Carlos and Donald, known In Beau-
mont as ‘‘A, B, C, and D,” passed
their pre-induction physical exam-
inations yesterday with flying col-
ors. They will be 21 Oct. 31 and
authorities said they probably will
be on their day to a training camp
In 30 to 60 days.
residence at 1002 South Hoff a
nue. The addition will cost ah
$1,000 and is due for complet:
by Oct. 15.
EL RENO MARKETS
•Corrected to 2 p. m. Sept. 13)
Wheat ------------------------$2.0<
Oats ______________________ 7fi
Kaffir ----------------------i 8(
Milo _______________ 17,
Barley ----------------------~ i.2C
Shelled com__________________ j 2g
Butter fat ________________
E«gs ..................•.
Heavy hens _________________’ 17
Light hens __________________ 13
CHICAGO GRAIN
CHICAGO, Sept. IS—(if)—Buyers
Services Will Be
Held Here Thursday
Services for Arthur Lapsley Bland-
ford, 85, El Reno hotel, who lived
here for 36 years, will be at 11 a. in.
Thursday in the chapel at Benson
funeral home.
Mr. Blandford died Tuesday in
DEPENDABLE
USED CARS
AT LOWER PRICES
Douglas Motor Co.
208 N. Choctaw
Phone 1880
ON DEATH WATCH
BOSTON - (U.R) — Dr. T1
Leary has retired as Boston’s
ical examiner after 40 year'
vice during which he Invest
44,000 deaths.
Louis Bromfield Is
Scheduled To Speak
ALTUS. Sept. 13 —(UJ»— Louis
Bromfield, well-known author and
farmer, has been tentatively sched-
uled to speak here early in Novem-
ber on a soil conservation program.
Bromfield is best known for some
of his novels dealing with farm
life^His speech will be sponsored
by the Altus chamber of commerce. I
Norman while visiting his daughter,
Mrs. Harold K. Wood. His grandson
I was killed in action recently in
Korea.
tRev. Otto Bergner, minister of
the First Presbyterian church here,
will officiate. Burial will be in El
Keno cemelery.
Mr. Blandford lived at 300 South
Choctaw avenue.
Mr. Blandford was born in Le-
banon, Ky„ and came to Oklahoma
in 1608, moving to Hobart. In 1914,
he moved to El Reno and had
lived here until the time of his
bedroom In the residence.
The second permit was issu
Paul G. Liebmann, 300 South
ker avenue, for an addition
stayed away from the grain market
today and as a result all cereals
rang up fair-sized losses.
Soybeans, down more than 3
cents at times, and wheat, off
around 2 cents at one time, bore
the brunt of the artllng. It wasn’t
very heavy selling, however.
Wheat closeu 1 1/8 to 1% lower
September $2.21 J/4. Corn was 1 1/4
, "T c’ amari> "-tm tinea that have a way of
ooking well with everything you wear... that's the
popular Stetson Playboy. A soft, lightweight,
correct hat for the man-about-town who
insists on being well-dressed, who insists on
a hat that accents his own individual
personality. See it today!
He was a member of the Pres-
byterian church here and belonged
to the Modern Woodmen.
Survivors Include one son, A. L.
Blandford, Oklahoma City; and
three daughters, Mrs. Wood, Mrs.
W. J. Boardman, Fort Worth, Tex.,
and Mrs. A. K. Dunn, Portland, Ore.
FORMER EL RKNO
RESIDENT DIES
Richard L. Creek, 35, former El 1
Reno resident 4fho once operated ■
the Reno Rancho cafe here, dipd I
stock market rolled ahead to a
new four year high today.
Leading Issues pushed up for
gains running to around $2 a share
many selling at their best prices
lor a year or more.
Rails were again strong favorites
and the group on average hit « 19.
year peak for the second day in a
row. Steels and motors also made
an excellent showing.
Business expanded to around 2,-
500,000 shares for the full session
largest volume in the past seven
weeks or so.
NEW VORK COTTON
NEW YORK. Sept. 13-9P,-Cot-
tcn futures were on the defensive
today. Hedge selling against the
new cotton crop increased and met
only scale down mill 1
mills no longer Wddii
ly for contracts New
commission house traders
the selling side.
Late afternoon prices w
a bale lower to 30 cent!
than the previous close.
14—20 32—42
Housedress or unsual — it's a
beauty! A flattering collar atop a
smart paneled dress, a double
breasted bib-effect, slantaway pock-
ets. Sew it in cotton or woo).
comes in sizes 14,
Pattern 9375
16, 18, 20; 32.
Size 16 takes 4'., yards 39-inch.
This easy-to-use pattern gives
perfect fit. Complete, illustrated
Sew Chart shows you every step.
Send 25c in coins for this pattern
to Marian Martin, care of The El
Reno Daily Tribune, No. 360, Pat-
tern Department. 232 West 18th
Street, New York 11, N. Y. Print
plainly name, address with size and
style number.
Hollywood inspired elegance
smartness to that new fall
1 ln rich soft Suede to add
Suit or dress. In Cafe brown
have that "expensive look’’
pi'ice of these operas for fall
Bulldozer Work
Pond Building
Agriculture Lime Spreading
C*ll C. E. Merveldt 2268-W-3
Or J. B. Sessions, 1934-J
The
STETSON
Playboy
MO
Sizes 51/2 to 8y2
Widths AAA, AA, B
support. With
»8 aggressive-
Oileuns and
■—-U took to
WALLPAPER - PAINT
Get Our Low Price*
BOTTK-HULME-BROWN
LUMBER C OMPANY
Phone 304
WHITING, Ind,— (U.P) -Police-
man Michael Skvnra was offered
a job as salesmnn because he repri-
manded if traffic violator. The mo-
torist said he would like to hire
should be.
CATALOG
Is In The Mail!
5 y°u.
6 jid
(rA
U>vs’ *b0P'’
TYPEWRITERS AND
ADDING MACHINES
SALES—RENTALS—REPAIRS
New and Reconditioned
henry behne
Typewriter Dept.
’—•------ -
I Dry Eczema
Simple Rash
Chafing
Chapping
Small Sum*1
Itching
•nurting
irritation
resulting
bom
quickly
relieved
with
toothing
oily
RESINOL0
220 West Woodson
Phone 608
READY-MIX CONCRETE
Phone 1140 El Reno
Materials Weighed Before Miking
T1 PETE SCHWARZ
Telephone Hours ’Till 1 p.M. Only
B0NDEX
Woterproof cement point
Seals surface ogainst
moisture. Keeps masonry
dry. Ideal for basement.
4-H, FFA Coun
Fair Will Open
•Continued from Page One)
Tlie.se are the officers and di-
rectors of the Junior fair;
J Robertson manager; Wade
McCann, assistant manager; Miss
Margaret Edsel, secretary of 4-H
f r s; Riley Tarver, secretary of 4-h
J' °' Dickev- secretary of
ITA boys; H. M. Woods, treasurer.
Others include E. O. Jeffrey. El
h^i0'J\R' Paulk' Ca>mnct; Frank
Ball, Yukon; Mrs. L. R. Schultz.
Okarche; R. a. Patzack, El Reno;
D-slie McMahan, El Rene W F
Schum„cher, El Reno; Roy Stafford!
LI Reno; Warnc Brandley, El Reno;
Mrs. C. E. Weiler. Yukon, and Clar-
ence McLvain, Union City.
PATIENT DISMISSED
Mrs. Florence Bowler, Hinton,
wa dismissed Tuesday from the El
Reno sanitarium. She entered Sent
I ft f/te TVW.U l __ 1 A.... i
Your
Wardrobe
Favorite:
WHEN YOU NEED IT!
$25 to $300
Loaned Quickly
On Your:
• SIGNATURE
• AUTOMOBILE
2 Vi lb*.
FAMOUS
PEREZ
CLASSIC
REG. 22c PATTERNS
REG. Ut PATTERNS
PATCHING PLASTER
Simply add water and use.
Fine-textured plaster that
won't shrink, crack, spot
through or discolor paint.
SAVE 3tc A ROLL
SAVE 36c A ROLL
now m tm
Point” Fabric
111 East Wood sun
BIBLE STUDY CUSS
S/pUTTY KNIFE (
Fine quality putty knife for
general use. Blade is Hex-
tble . . has walnut handle,
easy to grip.
SAVE 42c A ROLL
SAVE 53c A ROLL
Don’t Miss This Special Pre-Inventory
TFs famous Pare* Classic has if* place In 1
smart wardrobe: distinguished in town, at lunch*
everywhere! Buttoned fly-front dosing, large po
superb tailoring. New fabric pin-pointed in I
end saddle tan, blade and Irish green, blade
Haiti red. Sizea 16-20.
Sponsored by
The Reorganized
Church of
Jesus Christ of
Latter Day Saints
“EACH ONE
WUNG one*
One Big Odd Lot
Of Paints To Sell
In Next 3 Days At
GUM TURPENTINE
Guaranteed pure turpen-
tine for thinning paints,
house cleaning and disin-
fectant. In glass bottle.
d WHITE SHELLAC
Pure shellac. Produces a
smooth, colorless, water-
proof fj|m. use it on Q(|
types of wood surfaces
Omar L. Nunn
HERE’S PROOF YOU CAN
inter#; fompanu
EVERY PATTERN FADE PROOF
these sensational prices
MANY WATERFAST!
apply to every pattern on
display;
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Dyer, Ray J. The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 59, No. 168, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 13, 1950, newspaper, September 13, 1950; El Reno, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc924055/m1/2/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.