The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 55, No. 235, Ed. 1 Sunday, December 1, 1946 Page: 3 of 12
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Oklahoma Historical
State Capitol,
Oklahoma City, Okla,
The El Reno Daily Tribune
gle Copy, Five Cent*
(UJO MEANS UNITED PRESS
El Reno, Oklahoma, Sunday, December 1, 1946
OP) MEANS ASSOCIATED PRESS
Volume 55, No. 235
embers of All-School Play Cast and Student Assistants
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Pictured above are members oI the cast and student assistants for "Junior Miss," all-school play to be presented at 2 p. m. Wednesday and again at 8 p. m. Thursday
In the El Reno highschool auditorium. Top row, left to right: Darrell Williams, Marilyn Stevenson, Polly Sue Cooper, Kay Demice. Donald Smith, Glyndeen Crawford, Joanne
Huddart, Clarita Seamands, Harlan Hobgood. Middle row: Oordon Reische. George Sea mends, Wallace Bailey. Lloyd Eichholtz. Max Niles, Bill Sneed. Richard McLaren. Rob-
ert McLaren, Heniz Younghenn. Bottom row: Wilma Mathews, Richard Spurlin. Norma Lorenzen. Chauncey Hall. Mary Elizabeth Hubbard, Jack Kinkade, Donna Seunmnds,
Bobby Gene Marquardt and Nancy Weed. Charles W. Overton, dramatics instructor in the highschool. is directing the production.
la-Mor Leads
Paging Circuit
Schedule Prepared
For league Games
Survivor Paddles Skiff
To Safety With Hands
LEAGUE STANDINGS
learn W L
lla-Mor Recreation 3 0
l-M Sporting Goods 2 1
|ucrcd Heart 2 2
Roundhouse 1 2
krwcll Cliciiiical 0 3
lan-Tex Cleaners .0 0
PcL
1.000
687
500
J34
000
.000
GOOSE CREEK, Tex., Nov. 30-
(U.IO—A 17-year-old highschool boy
who paddled his skiff with his bare
hands today was the only survivor
of a hunting trio whose boat cap-
sized in the choppy waters of the
Oulf of Mexico yesterday.
Clyde Hesse, whose two com-
panions went down In the water.
day while Uie youths were on a
duck hunting trip.
The boat capsized and the three
clung to ns side, Hesse said, until
Moneyhon lost Ills grip. Moneyhon
was rescued but later slipped from
the skiff again and was swept away
by the current.
Hesse attempted another rescue
Orphans Have
Another Home
Tipton Board Buys
Hospital Buildings
Flames Damage
Store at Dallas
Neiman-Marcus Loss
May Hit $500,000
TULSA, Nov. 30—(U.R)— Thanks to j DALLAS, Tex., Nov. 30—<U.R)—A
the war assets administration and | spectacular pre-dawn fire which
other agencies, the orphans of the^rup*d , thp ^tue-fUled
] basement of the nationally-famous
Iipion orphanage, homeless since » Neiman-Marcus department store
reached shore only after rowing of Moneyhon but couldn't locate ! blaze destroyed their buildings Nov. | in Dallas may have caused damage
j with his bare hands for eight hours, him. Returning to the boat, hr 23. had a home again today'.
Sooners Drub
Hapless Aggies
By 73-12 Count
Cowboy Scores Are
Posted Against
Last Line Reserves
8TILLWATER, Nov. 30—(/Pt—The
University of Oklahoma, unleashing
a devastating ground and aerial at-
tack that earned them better than
a point a minute, smothered Uie
Oklahoma Aggies 73-12 today.
It was just that easy for the
Sooners. who scored 10 touchdowns.
10 points after touchdown and a
field goal in a runaway that
avenged last year's 47-0 defeat at
tlie hands of the Aggies.
The Aggies, who found at the
start their passing attack was no
good against the ferocious Sooner
line, were stopped cold until the
final period when, against the last
line O. U. reserves, they made their
three first downs and two touch-
downs.
The Sooners scored practically
every way possible, and the game
was chock full of brilliant runs and
passes and a half dozen backs
stood out for the winners.
Sooners Divide Scoring
For tlie first few minutes, O. U.
felt out the Aggies, then cut loose
with a 48-yard drive for the first
counter with Charles Sarratt slicing
right end 19 yards to score. Dave
Wallace kicked the extra point, the
first of nine he made good during
the game. The fiery O. U. left half
also kicked a 16-yard field goal.
The scoring was divided evenly
between Joe Golding, who made
three tallies, Jim Owens and Sarratt
who made two each, and Jack
Mitchell, Laddie Harp and Bobby
Ooad who each scored once.
Sarratt played a stellar offensive
! game. Besides scoring two counters,
1 his passing was brilliant as he put
1 the Sooners In scoring position sev-
jeral times with aerials and made
one pay off for a tally.
Mitchell provided the sellout
crowd of 18500 with the most
thrilling run of the day, taking a
reverse from Wallace on a punt re-
turn and reversing his field sev-
eral times to travel 70 yards to a
Kindness Is | Government Is
Made Real
mERRE HAUTE, Ind., Nov. 30
1 —(UJO—Amid a pounding of
hammers and the scratch of
saws, visible evidence of a com-
munity's kindness rose from the
ground today.
Some 80 carpenters, working
In relays without pay, gathered
around a vacant lot to erect a
new home for William and Mary
Wilbur and their two children,
William, jr„ 4, and Marie, 6
By nightfall the Wilburs were
moving in.
They watched the work begin
from the vacant filling station,
where they have been living
since fire destroyed their small
suburban 'home and fatally
burned their third child, Mary
Ann, 21 mcMths. The old home
burned while Terre Haute fire-
men, acting on city orders, re-
fused to leave the city limits to
fight the blaze.
The Wilburs lost everything.
And Wilbur, a bell hop, was so
badly burned rescuing his fam-
ily from the fire that he was
unable to work.
Neighbors collected $1,000 to
help replace clothing and fur-
niture. A sympathetic construc-
tion company official donated
building materials, and 80 mem-
bers of a carpenters’ union
volunteered their help.
Missouri Hunts
For Arsonist
Homes Are Robbed
After Fires Start
JEFFERSON CITY, Mo., Nov. 30
—(U.R)—Colonel Hugh H. Waggoner,
Lewis’ Attorneys
Mapping Strategy
For Legal Battle
WASHINGTON, Vov. 30 -W—
The government acted today to
chalk up retroactive fines against
the individual miners for each day
of the soft coal strike while pros-
pects for an out-of-court settle-
< ment waned.
The fines, $1 to $2 for each day of
Idleness, will not be collected, how-
ever, until the miners go back to
work and they can be deducted from
paychecks. And the proceeds will
go to the union’s own medical fund,
administrated solely by It.
Undeterred by this move, counsel
for John L. Lewis and the United
Mine Workers mapped fresh strat-
egy for their legal battle against
the government which resumes
Monday. They plan an appeal to
the United States circuit court of
appeals If the federal district court
ruling goes against them, it was
learned, and they hope that any
contempt of court sentence may bo
stayed until It is decided.
Burke May Be Replaced
The private operators of the
Southern Coal Producers associa-
tion, called to meet here Monday,
j may remove Edward R. Burke as
president, said one Industry official,
for his announcement Thursday that
"we are willing to talk” with Lewis
jon "wages, hours and everything
| rise." Ten directors have repudiated
Burke’s statement.
As the nationwide walkout of the
400,000 bituminous miners passed Its
tenth day, the number of steel,
Tactory and other workers laid off
in the creeping industrial paralysis
superintendent of the state high- climbed close to 100,000. Another 167 -
000 were on furlough from fuel-
starved factories for the Thanksgiv-
ing week-end.
; up In $500.ooo store officials said touchdown
,,Tl»e orphanage board has pur-; The Aggies made their first touch-
chased through the WAA four *>Tjtarough heat and Mlloke through | on “‘P^ng
pital buildings located at the Fred- a]1 5t,eei entrances of the exclusive'pUy from 0111 Joc AWrtd*e 10 Bud
___________________ ,...__P until 1 p. in. he paddled with his | erlck air base, Tom M. Moore, dep-1 five-story department store to train i Millcr w,tl1 one minute gone In the
Recreation team Is leading Hesse said their boat became hands until he reached shore two utv Waa director in charge of real streams of water on the basement flna pcrtod' , P*ayln8 a
......__ . .. ° oainK fnr tKa Aaoiec o thnnal,
Later he directed operations as
-- 1the bodies of his buddies. J A
the end of the first two \ Bradbury, 17, and Barclay Moncy-
i of play In the El Reno hon. 17, were recovered from Trin-
inmerlcal Basketball league, Pia- | ity bay.
found Bradbeny also had disappear
ed
At about 5 a. m. he righted the
boat. Hesse said, and from then
way patrol, was directing one of the
strangest manhunts in Missouri's
history today—one which probably
had no precedent anywhere.
Object of the search was an ar-
sonist who has terrorized residents
of central Missouri for nearly three
months by setting fires to their
homes, churches and business build-
ings In the dark hours of early
morning.
Against this wintry orospect were
a few feeble rays of cheer. The gov-
ernment announced Its drastic, 21-
state dimout would not prevent the
illumination of Indoor Christmas
trees. The official announcement
said that Civilian Production Ad-
ministrator John D. Small expressed
Sometimes his work seems to be (W ““JJ* work stoppage in
Ural of a shrewd profession*.ortm-1*® cwj *,“*a woul.d * sooa
Inal. On other occasions lie appears "n” ,
The fines against the individual
circuit with a perfect slate of waterlogged about 4:30 a. m. yester- j miles away,
victories and no defeats. •
lie the A. and M. Sporting I
pdf club Is in second position j
1 v.rtue of two victories and a
loss.
|Ln entry has been made by Pan- j
Cleaners to ooost the circuit
I six teams, it was announced
lur^ay by Bill Loyall, league
Isldenl.
rour games are played each
I'k. two of them staged on Mon-
night and two more on Thurs-
Rogers Hearing
Is Postponed
Deferment Granted
In County Court
Preliminary hearing
property, announced.
Moore disclosed it
took con- j
| blaze launched an Investigation Into
j cause of the fire.
Fire Marshal B. C. Hilton said the
siderable string pulling, several long bla2c dlscowed just before mid-
distance calls, permission from
*
_ for Ray-
f night. All games are played mond 33 of Oklahoma
the Etta Dale Junior highschool clty charged with murder In
^♦masium where the first game connection with the death of his
Icallcd at 7:15 p. m. wife, Peggy Rogers, whose body
Schedule for the remainder of was found In the spillway below
first round Is as follows: |Lake Overholser Nov. 16. now is
|>ec 2 A and M vs Round- scheduled to be conducted In Can-
*isc; Pla-Mor vs. Dowell Chem- adtan county court at 9:30 a. m
Wednesday, Dec. 11. it was an-
te. 5 -Round house vs. Han- nounced Saturday by Judge Roy
Pla-Mor vs. Dowell Chemical. M. Faubion.
w.1 The nearing originally was
lec B—Pla-Mor vs. A. and M.t ...., * ■ . . 1
j. > ii r-homirat scheduled for Dec. 4 but was oe-
indhouse vs. Dowell Chemical.
a . ferred upon motion of Virgil Shaw.
12—Sacred Heart vs. an- county Bttomey. and upon motion
A. and M vs. Sacred Heart. |of ^ d)>fens(> counsel
16— Pla-Mor vs. Pan-lex; , Rogers pleaded not guilty when
Iwell Chemical vs. A and M. | wag arraigned on the charge
Dec. 19—Roundhouse vs. Sacred Nov. 25. He was brought here Nov.
•an; A. and M. vs. Pan-Tex. 23 from Oklahoma City to face
lT)ec. 23—Pla-Mor vs. Round- s charges.
Vise; Dowell Cnemical vs. Sacred Mrs Rogers' garrotted body was
art. found floating below Lake Over-
)ee. 26—Pan-Tex vs. Dowell liolaer dam. Pour strands of
cmclal A and II. vs, Round- clothesline wire were wound about
jsc v her neck'
3ec 30—Pla-Mor vs. Sacred Rogers, an oil field worker, who
fart; Pan-Tex vs. Roundhouse was arrested Nov. 17 after his
_____— 1 wife’s body was Identified, main-
| tallied his Innocene until iNov. 21
Liquor Kt'PCHI -hen he slmed a confession that
• | he had killed her after a quarrel.
L.00II1S HS ISSII0 The next day he repudiated the
^KIAHOMA CITY. Nov. 30—<U.P) confession but Oklahoma City po-
ulqtior repeal Is almost certain to Nee presented evidence to the
an issue In the forthcoming 21st Canadian county attorney to file
ilahoma legislature but Its ulti- the murder cnarge. The case Is to
ite fate was anybody's guess, Rep- he tried here because Mrs. Rogers
tentative C. Raymond Board of was killed Just Inside Canadian
llse Cltv Indicated today. county, officers said.
ii.i.i. Mrs. Ro««r*. 33. had been mlss-
Board. slated to be house speaker. ^ ^ ^ ^ Auth#r|t|eg uId
Essay Contest
Is Arranged
Competition Sponsored
By V.F.YV. Auxiliary
"The Home — Cradle of Good
Citizenship," will be the theme of
the 12th annnual essay contest
sponsored by the Ladies Auxiliary | rooms but Moore obtained a release entire building and the combination
Washington authorities to rush the
deal through, and an airplane trip
to complete tire transaction.
Senator Elmer Thomas got things
rolling after the orphanage appeal-
ed to him for help. Thomas called
Moore, who started seeking a so-
lution to the plight of the 200 or-
phans.
night, apparently centered in tiers
of costly basement stocks.
Costly Furs Burn
Store Manager Robert A. Ross
said the loss easily could top the
half million dollar mark but added
"that's just a guess." Earlier esti-
mates placed damage at $100,000 but
Ross said costly furs and thousands
of Neiman-Marcus special gifts for
game for the Aggies although over
looked in the Oklahoma touchdown
barrage, also passed to his team's
other counter. With two minutes
left, he unfurled a pass to Ken
'Roof that clicked for 40 yards. He
[set up the touchdown with a 38-
yard pass to Bill Brown on the
O. U. 40.
to be the rankest sort of an ama-
teur, Intent on gaining a few dol-
lars and cheap trinkets from homes
which are left unoccupied as their
owners rush to the scene of his
latest blaze.
Incident Related
miners were authoized in union
agreements with private operators
and carried forward in the govern-
ment contract which Lewis claims
is terminated and the government
contends Is stlU in force. They were
. designed to give the union a weapon
Waggoner today related an lnci- for. prevenUng "wildcat" strikes
dent which might be considered | wWch |t dtd noi author**. The
humorous were it not for the devas- procedure under government oper-
tation wrought by the arsonist in aUon taU* for the mine operators
Tlie federal works agency had re- tlie Christmas buying season were
quested all of the buildings at the
Frederick base for college class-
stored In tlie basement.
Smoke rolled upward through the
to the Veteians of Foreign Wars
in oooperatlon with the Engllsn
department of the El Reno hlgn-
school. It was announced Saturday
by Mrs. Bernie O. Bremseth, chair-
man of the V.F.W essay contest
committee.
Cash awards totaling $2,000 are
being offered In the national con-
test. First prize will be $1,000 and
a gold medal; second prize, $500
and a gold medal; third. $250 and
gold medal: fourth. $100 and gold
medal. In addition, 20 consolation
awards will be given $o high-
ranking contestants.
Rules governing the contest may
be procured from the auxiliary or
the highschool English depart-
ment. Deadline for entering essays
In the 1946-47 contest is V" 15.
First place essay in last year's
competition was submitted by
George E. Ladd, a 20-year old
Cushing veteran who returned to
complete his highschool education.
His subject wgs "W!u4 Can I
Do for My Country?"
Prowler Is Frightened
From DeAtley Residence
on four of them. Then he and an I of -heat, suiokc and water raised |
WAA appraiser made an airplalne
trip to Tipton where they met with
the orphanage board and completed
the sale. Moore said the buildings
were sold for cash at current market
First Report Is
Made on Seals
Funds Arc Sought
To Combat Disease
his latest escapade at Lorcdo. sev-
eral miles north of Chilllcothe.
Tlie patrol chief had Instructed
his troops In central Missouri to
sound the alarm to residents of
towns which had been set ablaze by
the arsonist.
"I told them to warn these people
havoc with stores of priceless per-
fume and high cost furs and gar-
nents. j Yukon chapter of the Canadian
Firemen un Pun County Tuberculosis association,
The Neiman-Marcus blaze climax- under the chairmanship of Miss
prices, and the deal was cofnpleted 1 cd a series ol night fires which Minnie Bcltsle, has reported
within 24 hours. : kept Dallas firemen on the run
Tlie orphans now are being cared uaU1 dawn and caused damage
for In the homes of Tipton towns- ostlniated as hit h as $750,000. Three
people and fanners, but they 1 Bremen were injured slightly In
will be back in a home of their own bringing under control a $100,000
as soon as the buildings can be blazc whlch sw,,pt throngs a Bunus
emoved.
Moore said the Tipton orphanage,
owned by the Church of Christ, has
the reputation of having never re-
fused an orphan.
to apply to the government for au-
thority to impose the fines.
Lewis' contempt trial will be re-
sumed Monday after a week-end re-
cess. The contempt charge is based
on his defiance of a court order to
call off the strike.
Lewis suffered his first conclusive
swered a cautious "yes" to a
she had been dead at least two
rect question on whether he an-1
Ipated Introduction of a repeal [
solution.
Some legislators have agitated
r liquor repeal as a means of |
(slug new revenue since the re-
nt recommendation of the
~ uttirprui monthly session at 3 p. m. Tues-
Ivlsory committee that several tax, ^ , ,n ^ admln_
ws be Junked. lstratton building,
Oovernor-elect Roy J. Turner de- nounced Saturday.
Hied to be drawn Into a coutro-1 Safety problems and methods In
Parent-Teacher Council
Meeting la Scheduled
The Parent-Teacher association
tax * council will meet In Its regular
Christmas seal sales totaling $64.75
for the first such report In the
county on the current seal drive
It was announced Saturday by
Miss Alice McComas. executive
secretary of the association.
Feed Mills warehouse to destroy The drive was launched Nov. 25
large stocks of grain. (with seals being mailed to 5,936
Neiman-Marcns closed its doors county residents, each letter con-
today but Vice President Stanley taintn* 200 seals. Replies to the
Marcus said lie hoped to open Mon-1 letters have begun to pour Into the
day for the pre-Chrlstmas buying loca| chapter's office. Indicating
rush. He said telegrams were com- .hat the campaign will be a suc-
Ing In from manufacturers all over cesSi Miss McComas said
the nation offering replacement | QuoU for the ntg ^
___ [set at $2,700 for the current drive.
,Of this amount. 70 percent will
be retained In the county to com-
l bat tuberculosis. The remaining 30
percent will be turned to the state
committee In Oklahoma Cty to
^■a&frrj iy ^01
Reckless Driving
C harges Filed
Three persons charged with
reckless driving forfeited bonds In !
niunclpal court Saturday, records
In the office of Lee Harvey, chief
of police, revealed.
$75 Fine Is Assessed
For Drunk Driving
to stay In their homes when a fire | defeat yesterday when Federal
was discovered In their towns, as J judge T. Alan Goldsborough denied
the firebug seems to be motivated a defense motion to dismiss the
by a desire to rob homes when j contempt case. The court rejected
tesidents rush to the fires," Wag- arguments that lb Nov. 18 restrain-
goner said. ing order was void under the Nor-
Whcn fires broke out In Loredo j rls-LaGuardla act which restricts
early Friday morning a trooper rode : injunctions hi labor disputes.
Into the town and told a youth Burke proposed two days ago that
scurrying along the street to pass I me government recommend a two
tlie warning along to his neighbors, week strike truce to clear the way
But the modern Paul Revere had J [or immediate renewal of negotla-
money of his own that he wished | tions between Lewis and tlie mine
Jo protect and he hurried home. I owners.
placed Ills blllford on a dresser ill -
a room In which Ills sister slept,
and then departed again for the fire. I
Money Is Missing
As the twons citizenry watched
the blazes, someone—presumably the
arsonist—slipped Into the youth's I taped injury but the airplane he
home, took two flve-dollar bills was piloting was damaged extensive-
from the billfold, seized a clgaret ly Saturday afternoon when It over-
case and departed without awaken- shot the landing field at the El
lug the girl. Reno airport, the craft nosing-over
Tlie billfold was left on the dress- Nit the ground and turnhig
Hart Unhurt In
Plane Accident
Joe Hart, Jr., of Chlckasha es-
er. In examining It later. Wag-
goner found $160 in bills which tlie
upside down on Its back.
Lloyd Chambers, operator of tlie
arsonist—or thlef-liad overlooked airport, said there had been a shift
Tlie money, he said, was crammed Ni Uie wind shortly before Hart
after he was booked at 7:10 p. m.
court costs Friday when he plead-
Fi-lday on charges of reckless drtv- ed gulUy at his' arraignment be-
Ing and leaving the scene of an
A prowler in the J A. DeAtley accident. An a'utomobile operated ranrmirt^X
■me. 903 Sunset drive, was uusr__________
home, 903 Sunset drive, was
frleghtened away shortly before
1 a. m. Saturday before he had
completed the theft of a quantity
of clothing. 1** Harvey, chief of
police, reported.
The front door had been left
unlocked when the family retired
j for the night. Tlie prowler entered
land had made several trips Into a
bedroom where Mrs. Bea Tavlor
was sleeping to remtive clothing
from a closet before she was
awakened. When she called to In-
Informatlon filed In the case by
Virgil Shaw, county attorney,
Property Damage Caused
In Collision on Highway
Property damage was caused
collision which occurred
on Bickford avenue by McOautliey
collided with a 1940 model sedan
owned by Mrs. Minnie E Barge- I " collision which occurred on U
Motes. 118 North Bickford avenue, liutomoblle on U S hiithWBv 66 at I® hl*hway M at » P°,n‘ *bout two
which WHS parked at the curb In ? _ 17 “ *. "Hies southeast of El Reno at
the 100 block of North Bickford.
an-
a point five and one-half miles
officers reported. Uft rear of the | Zlr°Le^fJSTcc oMntox
T ^ ' llduor complaint was signed
estimated $5 while damage to the by ml Jana|#n gtale hlghway
right front fender of McOauthcy's patrolman.
automobile was approximately $12. j
Raymond Dale Oender, 30. of
Oeary, booked at 8:30 p. m. Friday
quire who waa In the room, he fled , for reckless driving, forfeited a $10
from the house and left'the stack |bond
of clothing on a chair In the front
room. Mrs Taylor, daughter of Mr
Oldest Son Misses
Family Gathering
7:15 p m. Friday, Oarland Ether-
idge, state highway patrolman, re-
ported Saturday.
A 1942 model sedan operated
east bv William Oeorge Mtrtgeley.
30. Oklahoma City, collided with
a 1934 model sedan driven east by
Frank Antone Elmenliorst, 43, EH
Reno route 2. when Elmenhorst
JENA, La , Nov, 70—(U.R)—Uncle started to make a left turn off
Into a secUon used for calling
cards.
That billfold represents the only
tangible clue the patrol has yet
been able to obtain. It Is now under-
going laboratory analysis lor finger-
prints.
A OI raincoat and a flashlight
were found at a previous scene of a
fire—at Hlgbee—but neither proved
of any value.
Five buildings burned to the
ground at Loredo, with damage
estimated at $75,000. Total damage
In 10 such fires was set at $250,000.
started In for a lauding at about
4 p. ni. and that he landed down-
wind, causing the ship, an AT-6, to
overshoot the field and come down
In a wheat field where the com-
paratively heavy craft nosed-over
In the soft earth Damage to the
plane was estimated at $500.
Hart was the Republican candi-
date for sixth district congressman
In the November election.
>rsv «m lhe repeal question. Hewing with these problems wNl|Rn(J M|v . not,Ilf-ri ihc po- hV Ered Sherman Sheldon. 45. of
’corw* undfr qpoqmou 'n*1
Jaw and Aunt Bianca Doughty,
A bond of $10 also waa forfeited l™th 94 their 75th wed-
ding annlver&ary here today.
However, their oldest aon. William
,ld lie knew o! no organized move- ^ Members of the state|llce departme"t al a m and ltw ‘'•or*'N Holt •*ve»,ue> *lko *•* i Richard Doughty. 73, of
BPI,1 In place Oklahoma among the'hlghVay patrol will participate ini* was made of the vicinity bonked at 11 *48 P m. for reckless Tex couldn't come
et stales.
the discussions.
but the prowler was not located, 'driving.
He's too old to travel.
the highway.
Damage to the left side of
Klmenhorsls automobile was es-
timated at. $15 while damage to
Yantls, | the front of the other vehicle
was approximately $50, Etheridge
Weather
Stale Forecast
Partly cloudy Bunday, cooler In
east und south portions.
FI Reno Weather
For 24-hour period ending at 7:30
a. ni. Saturday: High. 68; low. 37:
at 7:30 a. m„ 44
8tate of weather: FWIr,
Rainfall: None.
Football Scores
Army 20. Navy 18.
Notre Dame 28, Southern Cell-
(onlMl.
.Georgia 35, Georgia Tech 7,
North Carolina 49. Virginia 14.
Tennessee 7, Vanderbilt 6.
Louisiana State 41. Tulane 27.
Alabama 24, Mississippi Stats 7.
Hardin-Simmons 21, Texas 1>ch 8.
Rlcc 38. Bailor 0.
O U. 73. Oklahoma A. and M IS
Southern Methodist 30. Texas
Christian IS.
Holy Cross 13, Bostou College 0.
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Dyer, Ray J. The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 55, No. 235, Ed. 1 Sunday, December 1, 1946, newspaper, December 1, 1946; El Reno, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc924646/m1/3/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.