The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 52, No. 140, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 11, 1943 Page: 4 of 8
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El Reno (Okla.) Daily Tribune
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Family Reunion
Is Recent Event
‘lue Ribbon Community
Jj|outh Rock Island avenue,
•r the act of March 3, 1878
J «
DEAN WARD
tdvrrtising Manager
Croup Entertained
At Sunday Picnic
BY TRIBUNE CORRESPONDENT
UNION CITY, Aug. 11—A group
which enjoyed a picnic and family
runlon Sunday Included Wilbur
Oarrett and daughter of Ana-
darko, Lieutenant and Mrs. Charles
Coates of Thrson, Ariz.. Mr. and
Mrs. Wuodrow Coates of Duncan,'
Mrs. Mary Coates, Mrs Rugle
Coates and daughters. Caines Oar-
ret.t of Oklnhoma City, Mr and
Mr' K A. Petree and family, Mr.
and Mrs Henry Albers and family.
Mrs, C. A. Simmons and her
mother, Mrs Maggie Ward, have
returned from an extended trip to
Meridian. Idaho. The Dalles, Ore..
San Francisco and Los Angeles,
Calif
Miss Forrestlne Wallace and Miss
Virginia Woery departed recently
on a vacation trip to San An-
tonio, Tex., and Monterrey, Mex-
ico.
Mrs. John Conrad. Jr., of Calu-
met spent last week in the home
of Mr and Mrs. John Conrad
I r entitled to the use of re-
ted to It or not credited by
ereln.
[ ches herein also are reserved.
MEMBER
OKLAHOMA PRESS
ASSOCIATION
JAIL IN CANADIAN AND
Adjoining cocnties
Months__________ $140
,onths____________$3.00
rear____________$5.00
ax
ST 11. 1943
SINCERE. HARMONIOUS.
R CHURCH U A RESTFUL
;D PEOPLE: Worship the Lord
Capitol
Notebook
By John Owen
Associated Press Correspondent
This Ought io Prove Something or Other
/OKLAHOMA CITY, Aug.
—For a state that took the
pledge In Its craddle. Oklahoma Is
doing an awful lot of lawing these
days over the alcohol question.
Events today were shaping for a
showdown on whether Oklahoma is
legally right in taking these three
stands:
1. You can buy all the 3.2 beer
you want any hour of the day;
any day of the week.
2. But not in the average dance
hall.
3. And military posts within
the state can't have anything
stronger.
Each of the three contentions is
under direct challenge In a state
or federal court.
G'WAN! KNOCK IT
OFF/ I AIN'T AFRAID
OF YOU - NOW!
The 1933 law which legalized j
Thursday evening In buf jt j8 the workers
and Mrs Bob rrns) must file estimates
in 1943. In December many
revolt against the pay-
m—a revolt not against
initly sane method of col-
complications which were
idea.
Mr and Mrs. Joe Ross and fam- Hiding hodge-|x>dge which
Hv Mr and Mrs Ben Fedder- ,egin to become apparent.
sen spent
the home of Mr
Woods
The Woman’s So-lety of Ch-‘ *!'
taifcervlce of the Methodist f estimates,
will meet in the how 15, the always dreaded Ides of
* 8* 1 1 wen i or3e than ever. Without calling in an
"* for jJjji lUctory to piece together all the bad news,
some idea can be given.
Each of us will prepare a tax return. In it he will
figure the victory tax he owes, on one basis, and deduct
that portion which is being collected weekly. On another
basis he will figure his normal income tax. On a third he
will compute his surtax.
PROM these he will deduct the tax collected weekly on
the pay-as-you-earn basis—not the entire deduction,
but that portion which is not credited against victory tax.
Is that all? Oh, no. You remember the treasury refused
to permit writing the entire year 1942 off the books. It
wanted to do something for lower income people without
helping those in higher brackets.
Well, the business ami professional man, and the higher-
salaried executives, can hire u lawyer and an accountant,
at least partially at Uncle Sam’s expense, to figure out on
a fourth tax base how much he owes on 1942 income.
• # *
JJUT you, who can’t afford lawyers and accountants, can
pack some ice on your fevered brows and try to figure ^ ,
it out yourselves—and while you squirm, remember Ran- Option on the
dolph Paul’s averision to “forgiveness.” j curfew dors not
You Won’t go to jail for your errors, bWUM they I sales for taking hone
won’t be deliberate. II the errors favor I nch* Sam, he will
return the difference in a year or 'wo. If they favor you,
he will collect, also in a year or two, with interest.
And. in the beginning, it was all so simple and work-
able.
beer was hauled up before the
state supreme court last week on
the charge It violated the consti-
tutional prohibition ordinance.
After 10 years of appeasing drip-
ping wets and rabid drys, the
statute approved by a vote of the
people was assailed at Its vitals,
but attorneys said it did not nec-
essarily follow that the court would
find the constitutional question
was Involved.
The appeal was filed 'by Paul L.
Myrlck, Payne county Judge, from
a mandamus writ to require him
to hold hearing on a beer license
applicaUon. The writ did not dis-
cuss the law's validity.
Myrlck supported his stand with I
testimony of witnesses that they J
certainly did not get Intoxicated
on 3.2 and he declared that It
was public knowledge that there
was more power tn a glass of It
thAn the law let on there was
There have been decisions
touching on beer but not bearing
directly on constitutionality of the
1933 law.
Meanwhile, pleadings are under
preparation In the attack before
the criminal court of appeals on
the anU-honkytonk law that says
beer can't be sold at a dance hall,
and people can't dance In a beer
parlor. A decision Is expected by
early fall.
The state, through Sam Lattl-
more. assistant attorney general,
welcomes clarification of the In-
volved statute to aid enforcement.
Petitioners arc attempting to wipe
out all parts of the law except
the section which bans sale of
beer during late hours for con-
premises. This
mention bottle
Behind I he Scenes
In Washington
(Second oj a serin of four nrhclcs oil sedihon-a-s-ujual )
BY PETER KDSON
NEA Washington Correspondent
THE American* breed of Nazi propagandist doing business today in
x tlie United States, in spite of the war. may be divided for con-
venience into two clas ps—those who ure now under indictment and
those who have not yet been indicted.
The first group, now numbering 33, is (he better
known, but the mere fact that they have been in-
dicted and are now mostly free on bail of from
$1000 td $6000 has not stopped their activities nor
diminished their anti-American activities one whit.
Inside
the Axis
Presenting Facta
by the Foreign Service
Division of the Office «f
War Information
\V7ASHINGTON. Aug. 11—tSpe-
W clal) —Since
Take Court Asher of Muncie, Ind., publisher of ,
••X-Ray." It second class mailing privilege war I treats.
the war started
j going bad for the axis In Russia
and North Africa, axis propagand-
ists and communique writers have
developed an elaborate repertoire of
| cliches to cover their military re-
revoked in June, 1942, but it still goes out, at its
masthead thi line, "Entered as second-class mat-
ter at the postofflce, Muncie, Ind. (Application
Pending.)" .Asher is out on $5000 bond, under in-
dictment for sedition, but that has not stopped his
activities, either
Out of the mere fact that the U. S. Office of
Price Administration had brought to this country
a British government consultant on rationing ex-
perience. named Israel Moses Seiff, “X-Ray” builds
up a story headlined, "A Scheme of Planters for
Dictatorship Here to Throw U. S Into Chaos; British Israel Jew.
Mosok Seiff, Seeks U. S. Chaos t<* Put Over Totalitarian Scheme."
Edson
They Work
"pHE
naval training bast* at Norman is indeed a monster
when it comes to mass size, arrangement and training.
Here is action of thousands that it not keyed to clock
watching, complaining, loafing and misdirected leisure.
Seemingly here is industry hard at the job of getting ready
for war. No ifs and amis, no whyforea asked.
For the first time, from visits to enterprises of vast
nature, did "we see what seemed to be genuine activity. If
the workers in munitions plants, tanks, airplanes, truck
and other war plants are as hard at the job as these
trainees, then we've got the war won. There was none
of the waiting at the “coke” machine, no loitering in the
halls, no time out for smokes and gossip. Everything is
work, for everybody, from the head man down.
Down Memory Lane
Aug. II, 1
Charles Burger, who for the past year has served as
adjutant, was named to succeed \V, Nelson Hancock as
commander of the El Reno American Legion post No. 34
during the annual election of officers at the regular meet-
ing in Legion hall last night.
It was to honor Miss Fredonna Wa.vland of Chandler
♦ hat Mrs. \V. E. York, 418 North Bickford avenue, enter-
tained last night with a bridge party.
Wet* and drys as groups have
let the law legalizing beer alone tn
the last two legislatures while con-
sumption mounted to record fig-
ures and Its tax revenues hava
climbed to about tl.250.000 a year
The state's attempts to close Its
borders to liquor shipments for
military posts In Oklahoma sttll Is
being argued and will land before
the U. 8 supreme court before
long.
Lattlmore said It had not beep
decided whether to ask rehearing
of a decision of the circuit court
of appeals which held the state
couldn't Interfere with a $7,000
load of liquor headed from a wet
state to the officers' club at Port
8111.
The state contended such ship-
ments were not Interstate. The
federal courts so far have held
they were.
* * *
/GOVERNOR KERR hints broadly,
A* that his assault on compensa-
tion insurance rates is Just a
starter. He mentioned fire In-
surance premiums specifically but
did not say they would be next
He estimated the 6 6 percent cut
represented In new schedules filed
by compensation Insurance car-
riers would have Oklahoma Indus-
try $500,000 a year, but declared It
should be nearer 40 percent.
* * *
PRELIMINARY hearing (or for-
■* fr
j^LIZABI.ITI DILL!Nil ft Chit ji, alius the liuv. Frank Woodruff
Johnson, i ,.l . under Indietment for sedition, also free on $5000
bond, but that lias not stopped the activities of her “Patriotic Re-
search Bureau newsletter, mimeographed for direct mailing, and
one of the most active of the pro-N:izi, anti-Semitic sheets. Mrs.
DlllitiR led thr women who marched on Washington two years ago to
impeach Mr Iiooscvc It. and at that time she visited several congress-
men She is still dealing with congressmen, notably Ham Fish of
Duchess County, N Y In tu a ly every issue of her newsletter. Mrs.
Hilling carrier n plug for Fi h' - proposed amendment to the sedition
law, which, if p. I'd. would h. mstring all such trials. Not long ago
F i'ti --ont Mrs Dilling copies of his speech introducing the amend-
ment. along with Ins franked envelopes and Mrs. Dilling sent them
out to her mailing list.
On the West Coast there an William Kullgren of Altascadero, Calif.,
who edits "America S| ■ <kv" and C. Leon de Aryan of San Diego,
editor of ' The Broom." Kullgrcn's paper is largely reprints. Kullgren
himself i a v'i r’ctanan-n* irolo id who used the stars to prove that
Hitlci w..s rit-ht, and then turn, d anti-Semite. De Aryan's real name
Last year, for example, when the
I Italian armies were retreating In
Libya, Italian propagandists boast -
j ed to the world that the British had
"failed to impede the Italian move-
1 ment westward.” /
The Nazis have also made a fine
art of military alibis. Borne of the
I stock phrases used by the Nazis In
the past to explain away retreats
include “withdrawing to previously
( prepared positions," "disengaged
. themselves from the enemy,” "elas-
i tic defense," “mobile defense,”
j “fluid defense," "retrocesslve man-
| euver," “withdrawing maneuver,”
, and "unenclrellng maneuver."
When the Russians captured Orel
last week, the Oerman high com-
mand communique—In a master-
piece of understatement—declared;
"During the straightening out of
the front at the Orel loop, the evac-
uation of the town of Orel, which
was long contemplated, was carried
out tn the night of Aug. 5 undis-
turbed by the enemy.”
* • *
V/UGOSLAV and Greek guerrilas.
■ taking advantage of Italian
is Constantine l.ogcnopol, u Rumanian born "nationalist" who was
dishonorably discharged from the U. S. Army und sat out the last political developments, are increas-
war in Mexico. *— —>—* —*- —
THE above art the principal publishers in the group under indict-
ment The others nrc writers, speakers, organizers of societies thBt
follow the Hitler line The marvel is how they continue to get a fol-
lowing, but they Ho Robert Noble, Prescott Dennett, Hudson de
Fricst, Eugene Sanctum y, George Dcatherage and the rest. Most ol
them are out on bond. Mrs. Lois de l^afayctte Washburn, believing
all bondsmen are Jew - languishes in the District of Columbia Jail.
Olivet
Revival services conducted by
Rev. Oscar Eudnly of Carnegie,
which have been in
Comer Door
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Meade and j
sons. Delbert and Dwayne, were J
progress the ’f!md“'v d,”nfr «u“tVof Mr , Hnd
Mrs Rov Brisinan and son. Leon.
past-week, are continuing through Mr RIld Mrs R u Brlaman I
this week, with the public In-j were Sunday dinner guests of Mr.
vtted to attend and Mrs. W. A. King and son.
Mr and Mrs Ted McCray and [)onald ^ wer* Mrs
Mia* Lena Allison, 516 South Macomb avenue, will
depart tomorrow for a vacation in Carlsbad and Santa
Fe. N. M.
mer Oovemor Phillips drew an
unusually sparse attendance after
the first few hours. Could have
been the oppressive heat
* * *
lng their activity against axis oc
cupation troops In the Balkans, ac-
cording to the British radio, which
said that the guerrillas were pounc-
ing upon shifting Italian forces and
harassing Nazi units sent to re-
place them.
Recently, live British radio said,
two Italian divisions being shifted
from Yugoslavia to Albania were at-
tacked by the Yugoslav guerrillas,
who cut off the Italians by the usual
tactic of destroying bridges ahead
of the line of march. The Italians,
the broadcast continued, agreed to
turn over all their weapons, trucks,
and other equipment In return for
safe conduct to the border—an offer
that was accepted by the guerrillas.
In reporting similar Increased ac-
tivity In areas In which the Oreek
guerrillas operate, the British radio
family spent Saturday In El R. no ^ and daughl*r'I gave the following description of the
with Mr and Mrs. Raymond StroUd Karen Deanne.
OUBLIC thawing out of relaUons
A between
Mr. and Mrs. ."am Wallace ami bob, Joe, 208 North
Barker avenue, departed today for a week’rt visit to the
world fair in Chieigo.
Mias Opal Siler, 42ft South Ellimin avenue, and Ming
Margaret Patterson, 518 South Ellison avenue, have re-
lumed from Shawnee where they recently completed the
summer course at the Oklahoma Baptint university.
Oovemor Kerr and
Mrs. Mabel Bassett, charities com-
missioner. may signal a step to-
ward a definite prison plan. Mrs,
Bassett said In hla presence that
they had discussed the "possibility
of setting up a modern, humanized
system ... R takes time"
and family and Private Lonnie
McCray, who returned to hi* sta-
tion In Texas Sunday after spend*
lng a furlough here with irienda
and relatives
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Muuby and
family have moved to the i.irm
formerly occupied by Mr and Mrs.
Charles Wildman
Mrs. J. N Bales, who spent the
past month with her daughter, | on Mrs Charles Nall
Mrs. Jake Presley, Mr. Presley and babY Sunday afternoon
Mrs. D. E. Meade. Mr and Mrs.
R L. Brlsman were Wednesday
dinner guesta of Mr and Mrs.
Roy Brlsman and son, Leon.
Mrs. K Duncan of Seymour. Mr.
and Mrs. Jewel Duncan of Center
Orovle spent Sunday a f tor noon
with Mr. and Mrs. D. E. Meade.
Mrs. H. M. Robinson snd daugh-
ter, Mrs W. A. King and ion
and
Miss Mary Louise Clements of TuImh is spending a
two-week vacation with her aunts, Mrs. M. B. (ope 634
South Ellison avenue, and Mrs. Lula Forrest. 207 North
Macomb avenue.
William Fogg and Ray K. Bannister will attend the
dance tonight at Blossom Heath club near Oklahoma City.
Mrs. Thomus Greenlee and daughters, Tommy Fay and
Betty Clare, of Pine Bluff, Ark., who have been visiting
^■Greenlees unde. J. D. Murphy, and Mrs. Murphy,
810 North Rock Island avenue, for the past week, expect
to return home this week-end.
Wesley and Lee Beck. Allyn Crowley, Gene Whitlock,
Gerald Freeman, the Ellsworth brothers. Arthur and Ferd,
and other El Keno athletes gather each morning at Union
park lor a work-out in preparation for the approaching
gridiron season.
1. Name In order the six cities
of the United States that are
largest (n area?
2. Why did the United Stales
adopt the smaller size currency?
3. What la turglte?
4. Is the police dog a product
of cross breeding?
8. What Instrument of muslq
Is the most popular In Russia?
ANSWERS
1. Los Angeles. New York. Chi-
cago. New Orleans. Detroit and
Philadelphia.
2. For economy and conven-
ience.
3. An Iron ore.
4. No: It Is pitreblood Oerman
shepherd.
Infant son. Bobby Kay. In Gal-
veston, Tex., returned Saturday
and now U spending several days
with Mr. and Mrs Clifford Pal-
mer and son. John Olln Mr :uid
Mrs Bales plan to move to their
new location In Carnegie this week.
Mr. and Mrs. Irvin Baker. Mrs.
Lura Young of EH Reno. Mr. and
Mrs Nick Roscom of Long Beach,
Calif., Mr. and Mrs Odls Herrl-
man were guesla of Miss Carrie
Roscom Wednesday evening
Mrs. Flora Faulkner of Beth-
any spent tlie week-end with Mr*.
Ed Jung.
Ed NUenschwander returned Sat-
urday after spending several weeks
In Texas. Mrs. Nuenschwander has
Lesson in English
WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: Do
not say. “I have got enough
money.” Omit gel.
OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: De-
monstrative. Pronounce de-mon-
stra-tlv. with accent on second
syllable, and not dem-on-stra-Uv.
with accent on first syllable.
OFTEN MISSPELLED Mend;
le. Pronounce (vend.
SYNONYMS: Provoke, Irritate,
exasperate, offend, vex, anger.
Oreek patriots:
“The forces consist of young men
with sunburnt faces and beard* and
mustaches, with the exception of
the beardless little guerrillas, of
whom there are many. They are
all wearing uniforms of different
origins. Some wear Oreek uniforms,
others English, others Oerman or
Italian, and others uniforms of no
definite pattern. Their waists are
surrounded by cartridge belts. They
avoid the striking gold-braided uni-
forms worn by guerrilaa of former
times.
"On these uniforms, without ex-
ception. are the words: ‘Liberty or
death.' Their armor usually con-
sists of a knife, which they carry
In their belts or waists. The guer-
rillas never take any foodstuffs or
other things from the villagers by
force. The population Is living with
unlimited confidence under such
conditions. All the village* are ad-
ministered by communal councils,
which are elected by the people.”
WORD STUDY: "Uae a word
been visiting with her brother and | three time* and It la yours." Let
sister, Adolph Werner and Miss us Increase our vocabulary by mu-
Kuthryn Werner, cast of El Reno. | taring one word each day, Today's
Mr. and Mis. Bernard Rot her I word: IMPASSIONED; full o(
and family were Sunday evening [warm feeling; ardent. "Hla lm-
guesta of Mr. and Mrs. Odl- Her- > passioned words aroused the 11st-
a. aocorcipa._____ . whm \
jcucrs.
PREFERS ARMY
SACRAMENTO. Calif. (U.FJ—Rat-
tlesnakes drove Alvin Lawrence. 30.
from the rank* of the draft dodg-
ers to the armed forces. He held
out fo» 10 days In Yellowstone
national park, living largely on a
diet of berries and rattlesnakes,
but finally decided that the armed
forces would feed him better than
that and gave himself up.
Wednesday, August 11, 1943'
Hollywood
Film Shop
By Ernest Foster
United Press Oonespondeot
IIOLLYWOOD, Aug. M —(UP)—
** There Is no more leisurely
writing out a story in Hollywood,
then shooting It Into a picture and
being done.
Nowadays swift developments In
world events make nearly all topi-
cal pictures rapidly-changing af-
fairs. No one on the set knows ex-
actly how the story la going to end
until the final scene is shot.
One director who runs Into those
problems every time he picks up a
Record Peanut
Crop Predicted
WASHINGTON, Aug. U —(A>)-
With all producing states reporting'
Increases, the agriculture depart-
ment stated Tuesday Aug. 1 Indi-
cation pointed to an all-time rec-'l
ord breaking peanut average thla*i
year of 4.191,000 acres to be har-v
vested for picking and threshing.,
an increase of 22 percent over last
year. 1
Oklahoma led the states with a
100 percent Increase.
Based on the acreage intended!
for picking and thresnlhg, arnei
with average weather for the the
mainder of the .season, Ati
prospects pointed to a tote-
duction of 2888,450.000
newspaper Is Fritz Lang, who is j about 35 percent higher tl I
currently at Paramount making | 2.206,935.000 harvested lar
"Ministry of Fear.
Lang's picture has a British back-
ground. The story opens with a
brief Interlude in World War I and
then hops to the present day.
Lang thought he had his story
all finished before he started roll-
ing the cameras. Then things start-
ed happening.
One was the invasion of Sicily.
Lang's characters ware English of-
ficers In North Africa, and the dia-
logue had references In it to the
"coming invasion of Sicily.” Lang
called In his writers and then re-
shot the sequences to say that the
Allies alreay were on
soil.
Another scene had Winston
Churchill and other high officers
and almost 2 <4 times the
(1932-41) average.
In the southwest, the |
ment said the situation lk
formity.
Dry weather has been a
cultivation, especially In v]^jl|
the larger acreages and * i
labor supply.
Richland
Mrs. Rola Smith is working \l
Sicilian I a Paclter at the Crippled Children
hospital In Oklahoma City whe
their son. Robert Lynn, is r
covering from infantile paralysi
of the British command discussing Mr and Mrs F'ritz Hechtenberg j
the pro and con of a proposal to and famil>' entertained at a faml^
bomb Rome. The scene ended with-1 dlnner Tuesday evening honorii-
out a decision Petty Officer and Mrs. Johfl
So a few days later Lang had to! Mowre who are here #n furlou^
call back his Churchill and other i *rom the naval training base ;
players to reenact the scene. This Llttle Creek. Va
time the conference ends quite dlf- Cther guesU were Mr and Ml
ferently. The high command de- i F M Perlti,ls- Mr and Mrs ch'
cldes to bomb Rome without dam- Whllled of Oklahoma City, M
aging religious shrines. and Mrs w R Mowre* Chest
Then Lang turned on his favorite | Mowre' Mr and Mrs Bus Dea'
newscaster the other 8unday and; dorf( ol H Rcno
learned that Premier Benito Mus- Velta Jo Scheln' dau*hUfr ®
solinl's resignation had been ac- Mr and Mrs Clarence Sche*n|
cepted by the King of Italy. underwent a tonsil operation FiP
Lang hurried to a telephone and day mornln« 1
again called his writers and actors. Mrs E E Oramkow and daug#»
This time the story line had to be ter' Mlss Norma* are ln Edmoi
changed to Include Mussolini’s oust- thU week wl,pre Mrs
lng [ Is attending the short course fp
The director Is now keeping a teacbers
close watch on news headlines I Monte and Barbala *>° Barre
• * * | children of Mr. and Mrs. Ur
A N airplane donated to Los An- Barrelt of Oklahoma City, a
/■A rnim.v w„ , I spending several days at the hor-
of their grandparents, Mr a?
Mrs W. H. Barrett.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Schei
N airplane donated to Los An-
geles county by actor Robert 1
Taylor will be the first civilian
airplane permitted In the coast war
rone, the sheriffs office announced
The plane will be used by the
sheriff’s aero squadron to drop sup-
plies at scenes of forest fires and
floods. 8herlff E. W. Blscalluz said.
Public Records
and children spent Wednesday ev-
nlng at the Otto Scheln home
Mr. and Mrs. Sherman Schu.
nell and son. Rayburn, attende
a picnic supper of the Barrel
families at the home of MT
Robbie Keller ln Oklahoma Cl
Sunday evening.
Miss Ruth Scheln and Miss L
Oramkow of Oklahoma City spe
the week-end with relatives he
Problem a Day
Divorce Suit
Merdis O. Haskins vs. John Has-
kins. Petition for decree of divorce
and property settlement.
Warranty Deed
R Q and Justine Opal Jones
to E. F. and Mattie May Mash-----**
brn. Lots 29, 30, 31 and 32. block A rope 5 ft. long extends frt1
10. Rubbons addition to El Reno, the top of a centeg-pole 60 t
Leaae Agreement high, to a stake in the clrcumfe
N. A. Nichols to the United ence of a circus ring. What Is tl
8tates of America, acting by the , diameter of the ring?
National Housing agency. 8econd ANSWER
floor only of a two-story struc- 50 ft. Explanation—Subtract O
ture located on lots 2 and 3. square of 60 from that of 65; e
block 81. El Reno. | tract square root; multiply by
BASEBALL MANAGER
HORIZONTAL
1,8 Pictured ball
team manager
13 Exist
14 Flax cloth
15 Withdraw
16 Ad valorem
(abbr.)
17 Like
18 Hollow tubes
20 Wander
22 Obtain
24 Weight
allowances
25 Ladles out
water JK
26 Upon *
28 Pound (abbr )
29 Narrow paths
33 Speak
36 Outer Guard
(abbr.)
37 Mass of soft
material
39And (Latin)
41 U*
42 Fox
44 3.1418. _
45 Locomotor
ataxia
47 Provided t
49 Parent
M Slav*
53 Peel
38 Tag
81 Friends
63 Make new
a|hin
65 Negative
66 We *
67 His team u in
the National
69 Pertaining to
the sun
71 Left end
(abbr >
72 Snuffle X
73 Vex
VERTICAL
1 Pennant
2 Ascend
3 Any
4 Fiber knots
5 Weave
6 At liberty
7 Relax
8 That one
9 Courtesy title
10 Shell fish
11 Pertaining to
blood
12 He manages a
■ team
13 Nights befor*
19 Peep
21 Baby’i
napkins
23 2000 pound*
27 Modem
29 Destiny
30 Since
31 T.ee fluid
32 Permit
36 Wonder
35 Affwnativ*
38 Obacure
40 Beret
43 Herb
48 riying
mammal
48 Frustrates
50 Carry
51 Besides
52 Sorrow
54 Faithful
55 Bobbin
56 Within
57 Nuisance
59 Kind of duo
60 Pierce
62 Monkey
64 Affliction
68 Gravimetric
volume
(abbr.)
70 Music note
4
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Dyer, Ray J. The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 52, No. 140, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 11, 1943, newspaper, August 11, 1943; El Reno, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc924423/m1/4/: accessed April 23, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.