The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 49, No. 309, Ed. 1 Monday, February 24, 1941 Page: 3 of 6
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MONDAY, FEBRUARY 24,1941
EL RENO (OKLA.) DAILY TRIBUNE
v
THREE
Society
• SERIAL STORY
i CONSCRIPT'S WIFE
s
BY BETTY WALLACE
eOPVRIOHT. 1041.
NCA aCRVICS. INC.
OTTO MITCHELL HONORED
ON BIRTHDAY ANNIVERSARY
Mrs. Otto Mitchell, 1207 East
Foreman street, entertained at a
surprise birthday party for her
husband Friday evening. Members
TUESDAY
Alethia Sunday school class of
of the Bible Baptist church were the First Methodist church. No-
invited.
A white cake, topped with pink
roses and candles, was inscribed
with the words "Happy Birthday.”
The cake was served with a de->
licious dessert in patriotic motif.
Group singing and informal
games provided diversion for the
evening.
The honoree received attractive
gifts from William Anderson, Er-
nest Long. Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Freeman, Mr. and Mrs. G. Stans-
bury, Mr. and Mrs. Claude Kelly,
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Coker, Miss
Helen Underwood, Miss Mary Jane
Sheets, Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Gam-
ble.
* * *
STUDY CLUB WILL MEET
IN SCHOOL AUDITORIUM
Members of the Irving Study
club will meet Tuesday in the
Irving school auditorium at 3:45 p.
m.
Mrs. Earl Armold will be the
principal speaker, using as her
topic, "Reading With Children."
Others who will appear on the
program are Clarice Childers, who
will entertain with a piano solo,
and Joan Crose, who will give a
dramatic reading.
A round table discussion on the
Parent-Teacher manual will be
conducted.
All parents are being invited to
attend.
Mrs. Hal Roberson Enter-
tains Sorority
MODERN
ETIQUETTE
host social in church parlors.
Cozy Corner club. Hostess, Mrs.
Victor Schwab, south of El Reno.
Chapter M of P. E. O. Hostesses,
Mrs. H. L. Fogg. Mrs. F. H. Mor-
ris and Mrs. C. A. Richards, at
1 o'clock luncheon in Episcopal
parish house.
A. B. C. Sewing club. Hostess,
Mrs. James P. Briggs, 711 South
Barker avenue, at 1 o’clock lunch-
eon.
G. T. C. club. Hostess, Mrs. C.
A. Evans, 415 South Roberts ave-
nue.
Women's Benefit association.
Business meeting in Eagles hall at
1 p. m. Benefit card party at 2
p. m.
Friendly Sewing circle. Hostess,
Mrs. Earl Scarlett, 512 South Ma-
comb avenue.
Booster class of First Christian
church. Monthly social in church
parlors at 7:30 p. m.
WEDNESDAY
Knit and Tuck club Hostess,
Mrs. O. L. Janeway, 1021 Sunset
drive.
D. Y. W. Y. K. club. Hostess.
Mrs. Grace Smith, 415 North
Choctaw avenue.
Cro Tat Em club. Hostess, Mrs.
Loren Spurr, 718 West London
street.
Home and Child Study club.
Hostess. Mrs. Andrew B. Smith,
907 South Barker avenue.
Jolly Stitchers club. Hostess, Mrs
R. B. McCain, 403 North Evans
avenue.
BY TRIBUNE CORRESPONDENT
YUKON. Feb. 24 -Mrs. Hal
Roberson was hostess to the Alpha
Zeta Beta sorority at the home
of her mother, Mrs. Cora Bunch,
Thursday evening when Mrs. John
Meinders, Miss Katie Goodall and
Mrs. Harvey Holland of Okklahoma
City were additional guests.
In the games of bridge, club
favors were awarded Mrs. James
Bradflcld and Mae Neeley. Miss
Goodall received a guest prize.
The hostess served delicious re-
freshments.
The club will meet with Mrs.
Jack Sinclair on Thursday, Mar. 6.
Mrs. Walter Berg entertained
the Auxiliary Bridge club at her
home Thursday afternoon.
In the games, favors were
awarded Mrs. Wilburn. Mrs. R.
E. Mason and Mrs. E. E. Boles.
Mrs. Harold Bucholz will be
hostess on Thursday, Mar. 6.
M. A. Brattin, vocational agri-
culture teacher in Yukon high-
school, accompanied a group of
F. F. A. boys to Maysvllle Sat-
urday. to attend a gram judging
contest.
Mrs. C. C. Coyle has returned
Yesterday: Martha does not
go into detail concerning her re-
turn to the office, spends most of
her time taking notes of the
conference. Paul wants her to
remain in New York to report
the morning session, but she re-
fuses, knowing Bill would never
accept any explanation. She
takes the plane home, never
dreaming just how crazy Bill
could be, nor how appalling a
situation awaited her.
* * *
BILL GOES WILD
CHAPTER XVII
A LIGHT burned In Mrs. Lar-
aa kin's parlor. Martha, tired
at the switchboard told him I whs
in New York with Paul!"
"Yes," she heard Mrs. Larkin's
voice speculating. "Yes, he must
have been at the office in the day-
time. Where was he till he came
here? Do you reckon he was out
among your friends—finding out if
you told anybody anything? Ask-
ing them what they knew?” The
shrewd old eyes gleamed with sud-
den malice. "His getting so ex-
cited about your clothes looks to
me like your husband must have
thought maybe you were running
away!"
* * #
TX)R a moment, Maltha huddled
r Hu
keep him here, but it was no t say this, Martha, but I—I think
g00(j . » I he's been drinking. If he went to
Suzanne drew her in. She moved your boarding house—raising Cain,
around the living room, switching | and then—then didn't know what
on lamps, drawing blinds. From to do next, it seems to me he—he
a box on the coffee table, she ex- probably stopped for a drink
tended cigarets. somewhere.”
"Sit down. Let me get this! "Or two or ten,” Martha whis-
straight. When Bill came here, all | pered. "Oh, Suzanne!”
in a dither, I couldn’t make head i "I'll get dressed at once. Weil
or tall of it at first. He seemed to | get in my car. We'll scour the
think I'd know all about it." Her j town for him."
lips twisted. “I gave up playing j (To Be Continued)
follow-Paul after that mes6 in the -
hospital Oh Martha I've been so PhilHpS To Attend
there on the sofa, misery shak-
ing her. Then she caught at the
That’s where Bill went! He must
have. There was no one else. He
must have gone to her house to
find out if she knew whether Paul
and I—Paul and I—" Her throat
Suddenly
after the flight from New York,
her head aching, gave it no
thought • as she started up the
stairs to her room.
“Is that you. Mrs. Marshall?”
called a voice from the kitchen.
The door opened, and Mrs. Larkin,
in a bathrobe, came into the hall.
“I was just making some coffee. I Up convulsively,
was waiting for you. That’s why
I've got the parlor lamp on.”
"Waiting for me?" Martha
turned, and went down the stairs
again. She saw now that the old
woman’s hair was tumbled, her
eyes heavy with sleep. As if she
had retired and been rudely
awakened.
‘Oh, Mrs. Marshall," Mrs. Lar-
sorry about that! It was cheap—
stupid—”
"Never mind about that! What
did Bill say?" j -
“I’m telling you! He thought ENID Feb. 24—(U.R>— Governor
Program At Enid
What’s In Name?
These Say Much
_ 4 •
QUEBEC CITY. Feb. 24—(UP.) —
Messrs. Alexopoulos and Cohen ap-
parently are not great admirers of
Messrs. Shakespeare and Burns.
"What's in a name?" is a thought
provoking question which W.
Shakespeare penned somewhat over
four centuries ago.
A couple of centuries later a
young Scotsman came along with
“a man's a man for a' that." His
name was Bobbie Burns.
But today Messrs. Alexopoulos
and Cohen showed they were far
from being in agreement with the
Elizabethan playwright and the
Highland bard.
| They went to the Quebec legLsla-
!ture seeking to have their names
* —. arrsrsrs
. . . asking them . . . Suzanne! | _aj ieast j_gnew you'd eloped to | dinner and auction of choice live-
jjew Y0rk. or something ... He j stock during the annual Northwest
raved and swore and asked me I Oklahoma junior livestock show in
where you were, how long you Enid Mar. 15, according to Dale
were going to stay — things like Johnston, chairman of the chamber |theless succeeded in making known
that. I told him it was nonsense, j of conimerCe committee in charge his opposition to the bill. Name-
I told him I didn't know where Qf lhp show
Mescon.
Opposition leader Maurice Du-
plessis didn't quote Shakespeare
and Burns on the subject, but none-
she was galvanized into action, i pauj was bu[ [hat I was certain
She leaped to her feet, her body | y0U weren'[ in New York at all.
from Tulsa where she has been , kln wailed. '“Your husband was
with her daughter, Mrs. O. F. here! In his uniform. He rang and
stiff with decision. “Excuse me,
Mrs. Larkin. Thanks for—for tell-
ing me. I must go out now. I—
goodnight. Mrs. Larkin!"
Her landlady stared at Martha
as if she had suddenly taken leave
of her senses. "It’s 1 o'clock in
the morning!"
Bu! Martha was opening the
front door. An Instant later, the
Dickensen, who underwent an rang and laUg—it, must have been | coi(j night wind stabbed her. She
operation a few weeks ago at the j onlv an hour or two ago—and he
Halstead hospital in Halstead, Kan. can.jed on something fierce when
Q What are some points in
etiquette that every child should
know and remember when attend-
ing a party for children?
A. To arrive on time: to greet
the little host and his mother; to
present his gift, if it is a birth-
day party; to enter all games will-
ingly; to eat in a well-mannered
way and never to forget to say
"Goodnight" and "Thank you" to
both his hast and mother when
leaving the party.
Q. What should be on the lun-
cheon table when the guests are
seated?
A. The service plates, silver, wa-
ter glasses, bread and butter plates
and napkins.
Q At a double wedding, should
each bride have her own maid-of-
lionor?
A. Yes. although they may have
the same bridesmaids, and each
bridegroom has his own best man.
The Women's Missionary union
of the Baptist church met Wed-
nesday afternoon at the church
for noon luncheon and an all-day
session.
Ten members were present..
The program for the day was
from the mission study book, "The
Trail of Seed."
The book review was given by
American Legion auxiliary. Host- : Mrs. D. B. Phillips, Mrs. Homer
ess, Miss Ida Ferguson. 415 South
Macomb avenue, with Mrs. Lee J.
Stoneman in charge of program.
Sunset Bridge club. Hostess. Mrs.
R. P. Witt, Jr., 1008 South Had-
den avenue.
Damrosch Music club. Hostess.
Mrs. John C. DeLana, 800 South
Macomb avenue.
Modern Matrons. Hostess, Mrs.
Ross Cleaver. 1110 West Woodson
street.
El Reno Camera club. Hostess,
Mrs. R. C. Matson, 907'a South
Macomb avenue.
Jolly Eight Bridge club. Host-
ess, Mrs. R J McGinnis, 518 North
Rock Island avenue.
THURSDAY
Women's Society of Christian
Service of the First Methodist
church. Division meetings:
Division 1. Hostess, Mrs. John
Mitchell, 314 South Williams ave-
nue Associate hostess. Mrs. E E.
Brown.
Division 2 Hostess, Mrs. W. R.
McAnnich. Mrs. M. A. Brattin and
Mrs. Houston Blevins.
The meeting next week will be
at the church for Bible study and
a business meeting.
Music ‘Softens’
Tooth Grinding
DALLAS. Tex
Something new in dentistry is
being tested in the penthouse
offices of Dr Tom Connor and
Dr. Lynn Stitt, who adhere to
the theory that with a little
stage effects much of pain could
be eliminated.
They work with soft lights, music
and psychology.
Next to the chairs in their 17th
I opened the door. He insisted on
going upstairs. I couldn’t make it
out. He wanted to see if your
clothes were gone!" She wrung
her hands. "I never saw a man in
such a state, Mrs Marshall! He
was fit to be tied!"
"My husband? Are you sure?"
The room seemed to be whirling
dizzily. Martha put her hands up
to her aching head, and sat down
quickly on the sagging sofa. “What
did he say? What was the matter?
I don't understand."
"Oh. Mrs. Marshall! All I know
is, he was talking wild. Ringing
and banging on the door and then
asking were you here. I said no,
you didn't come home He asked
me if I knew where you were.
How would I know? He just kept
trying to get me in a corner, as if
Feb. 24 —<U.P>— j weren't telling the truth!"
Righteous indignation asserted
itself. Mrs. Larkin's breast heaved,
her eyes snapped. "I got so mad I
wanted to call the police. He bust
In, ran up the stairs, yelled he had
to get in your room, had to see if
you’d left your clothes."
"Oh. why? Why?" Martha
wailed. "What on earth—the fool!
TTie crazy fool!" She couldn't
hurried down the street, oblivious.
Two blocks away there was an all-
night cab stand. She had to get to
Suzanne’s house on Sugar Hill.
That's where Bill had gone, all
I—" Suzanne’s creamy face flash-
ed, “I honestly tried to repair
whatever damage I'd done that
time, Martha."
"Damage!" Martha's laugh was
curiously mirthless. “He's thought
of nothing else. It kept growing in
his mind. He magnified it to even
greater importance than you ever
did—he got sullen, impossible —
made trouble for himself at camp
—quarreled with me, kept asking
me things about Paul—when I'd
seen him, trvtng to trap me into
admitting things—oh—"
"I'm so sorry! I'm so sorry I
Last year the governor auction-
ed off the first calf. The auction
is held each year at the end of
the show to give youthful exhibi-
tors an opportunity to dispose of
their stock at premium prices.
right. It was there he had spent ever said a word!"
the hours between his discovery at
the office and his appearance at
Mrs. Larkin's.
The lights of a drugstore arrest-
ed her. Telephone? No! Suppose
Suzanne didn't want to see her
now. Suppose she was glad this
had happened—suppose she had
filled Bill with more poisonous,
malicious misinformation!
Strangely, out of the red haze
which engulfed her, Martha re-
membered the country club dance
about which Suzanne had been so
furious. The dance Martha had
lied about to Bill. “I told him I
was bowling with the girls." Had
Suzanne remembered that, to-
night?
A lone cab stood at the corner.
She pulled open the door. "Sugar
Hill." The name of Suzanne's
street eluded her, for a dizzy mo-
ment. “Stafford — no Stratford
Road. The big white house off by
Itself in between Palmer and
Britt. .
* * *
English Students Form
Squad To Bathe Babies
MANCHESTER. Eng., Feb. 24—
(U.r)—Young men and women stu-
dents of Manchester university
have formed a “bath squad" as
part of their contribution to the
help being given to hard-pressed
mothers of large families who have
been bombed out of house and
home.
The procedure is to gather up
babies soon after breakfast, carry
them to the men’s and women's
Unions, wash them in the base-
ment a dozen at a time in bath-
tubs and wash basins, and then
return them home to their mothers.
"That's a big help now!"
"Don't, Martha! I—I'll do any-
thing. Look, let's get this straight.
How did you know he'd been here?
Where did he go after that?”
"He went to my boarding house.
Rushed upstairs to see if I'd taken
my clothes! I simply guessed that
he'd been here. But where can he
be now?"
# # #
rtUZANNE'S silver mule tapped
O the rug reflectively, while
Martha sat on the edge of the big ______
chair, her mind a battle-ground _(U.p.)_Mathematlcally-mlnded per-
on which conflicting emotions raged | sons whQ ,ike t<) figure odds have
back and forth. Anger at Suzanne rea, problem l0 consider in the
Same License Numbers
By Chance, Not Design
GRAND RAPIDS. Mich., Feb. 24
changing would lend itself to abuse,
he charged at a meeting or the com-
mittee on private bills.
L. J. Comeau believed Ottawa
would prefer, at least during the
war, that names should indicate the
racial origin of the possessors.
Perrault Casgrain thought that
"In these times the Greeks deserve
special privileges."
"In these times the Greeks should
be proud of their names," reported
Duplessls.
The Alexopoulos bill was approved
by the committee, 16 to 8.
In the case of Cohen, name-
changing was upheld by Maurice
Hartt as of assistance in assimilat-
ing foreigners.
"If you refuse you indicate that
you do not want to assimilate thenf.
Mr. Cohen doesn’t ask to take a
French-Canadian name. Keep those
for yourselves, if you want. He
simply asks to rid himself of his
present name, that which he had
before he emigrated to America."
Hartt said.
The committee decided 20 to 9
that Cohen will be Mescon, as far
as it is concerned.
• HOW CAN I?
Buckner, 414 South Roberts ave-
Divislou 3. Hostess, Miss Gladys
Jensen. 315 Blast Wade street.
Division 4. Hostess. Mrs. E. H.
Q How can I lengthen the life [Little. 1201 West Wade street.
of candles?
A Take each candle by the wick
and give It a good coating of
white varnish. The varnish will
Assistant hostess, Mrs. John Chap-
pell.
Royal Neighbors of America.
Regular meeting in I. O. O. F
keep the grease from running down i hall
and will thus preserve the life I Social Order of Beauceant. Host-
of the candle.
Q How can I treat laryngitis?
A When a cold, or laryngitis,
has caused you to lose your voice,
try taking a dose of bicarbonate
of soda several times a day; it will
aid wonderfully in regaining your
voice.
q What can I do when I have
discovered too much salt has been
added to cooking food?
A Stretch a clean cloth tightly
over the vessel and sprinkle one
tablespoonful of flour over the
ess, Mrs. W. K Misenhelter, 421
North Evans avenue.
Bid or Double Bridge club. Hosts.
Mr. and Mrs. Leo Kamm, 811
South Ellison avenue.
Women's Missionary union of
First Baptist church One o'clock
covered dish luncheon In church
parlors and book review.
Security Benefit association
Regular meeting in Eagles hall.
Omega chapter of Beta Sigma
Phi. Hostess. Mrs. Don Allison,
800 South Hoff avenue. Miss Lu-
cloth. Allow it to steam for a few idle Glover will give book review,
minutes and the flour will absort) I Members are being permitted to
the salt. I Invite guests.
MODERN MENUS
BY MRS. GAYNOR MADDOX
NEA Service SUIT Writer
CHRIMP in hominy ring U an
^ old southern custom just right
for the Lenten meal. As both the
shrimp and hominy are readily
available anywhere, this recipe
will appeal to kitchenette end
business wife, too.
Dried fish is a low-cost item
with both Lenten and economy
advantages. Try this novelty for
the next meatless dinner.
CASSEROLE OF FINNAN HAD-
DIE. EGGS AND POTATOES
(Serves 4 to 6)
One pound finnan haddie, 4 or
8 medium-sized potatoes, 2 hard-
cooked eggs, 4 tablespoons butter,
4 tablespoons flour, 3 cups milk,
salt, pepper.
Cover the finnan haddie with
cold water, heat slowly, and sim-
mer for 10 minutes. Drain and
flake the fish. Cook and slice the
potatoes. Slice the eggs. Make
a white sauce of the butter, flour
and milk, and season with salt and
pepper. Arrange the fish, pota-
toes and eggs in alternate layers
in ■ baking dish, adding white
sauce to each layer. Cover the
dish or add a layer of buttered
crumbs and bake In a moderate
oven until thoroughly heuted.
(1111.1 SHRIMP IN HOMINY
RING
(Rervea 4 to 4)
. Tour tgblwwfll fruttag, JkJHR
TOMORROW'S MENU
BREAKFAST: Tomato
and lemon Juice, oatmeal
griddle cakes, crisp bacon,
syrup, coffee, milk.
LUNCHEON: Casserole of
finnan haddie, cabbage and
apple salad, nut cookies, tea,
milk.
DINNER: Chopped mixed
greens salad, shrimp in
hominy, raw carrot sticks,
green peas, butterscotch pe-
can tarts, coffee, milk.
chopped green pepper, S cups
whole cooked hominy (one 1-lb.,
13-oz. can), 1 teaspoon salt, 3
tablespoons butter, 3 tablespoons
flour, y« teaspoon salt, lVfc cups
tomato Juice, V4 cup chill sauce,
2 cups canned shrimp (2 No. 1
cans),
Melt butter in frying pan. add
green pepper and cook slowly un
til the pepper la tender. Add
hominy and salt and cook slowly
until hominy la thoroughly hesled.
Melt butter In saucepan; blend in
Hour, tomato juice and chili sauce
and cook, stirring constantly, un-
til thickened. Add shrimp; cook
until shrimp are heated. Arrange
hominy In ring flh platter or pack
Into 8-lnch buttered ring mold and
heat in moderate oven (3S0* F.)
15 minutes. Fill center with
lltuupp mixture.
floor office arc push-button boxes mlnd was a jumbled
which control phonograph records
—just like the juke box arrange-
ments.
All they have to do. while the
drill Is exploring cavities. Is to
press any of 24 buttons and soon
the room Is filled with a lulling
tune.
For seven years, since he was
graduated from Baylor dental col-
lege. Dr. Connor has believed that
with anesthetics and a modern ap-
proach to the problem the pain
could be removed.
What he and Dr Stitt have done
was not revealed by the two. but
their revolutionary departure from
established customs was described
by Homer Fisher, manager of the
building In which they have their
offices.
First they did away with the old
familiar white - walled dentist's
chambers. Dr. Connor’s idea was a
parlor, which, by pleasant sur-
roundings, would relieve the pa-
tient's mind of mistaken fear and
make a visit to the dentist more
pleasant.
The new offices are In an in-
triguing penthouse retreat with
sliding doors, soft lights and
soothing music.
The patient enters through a
cushioned door that automatically
slides back as he approaches. He
finds himself In a large reception
room done In a Chinese motif, with
bamboo furniture. On the wall is
a large third dimensional mural of
mountain-top monastry scene
with actual running water tum-
bling down a fall and coursing
along a winding stream.
A soft pastel color scheme Is car-
ried out. even in the operating
rooms, where dental chairs, cabi-
nets and other equipment are of
latest design and arranged for
super-efficiency.
A strong believer in the value of
psychology, Dr. Connor Is a mem-
ber In good standing of the Society
of Amateur Magicians and he en-
tertains children with slelght-of-
hand tricks to take their minds off
their teeth.
AT last the cab slopped Martha
z\ paid the man. trembling. She
' chaos.
Mrs. Larkin asked sharply,
"Where were you, anyhow?"
“In New York. I flew — the
office—"
"Aha!" cried the old woman
•That's what he said! I thought
he was out of his head. He said
you were in New York and he
wanted to find out about your
clothes!"
Martha sat bolt upright. "He
knew I was in New York? Then
he must have gone to the office!"
* * *
rjWIFT understanding washed
& over her. Bill had received her
note. He knew she was in the of-
fice. And he'd come there Some-
one there must have told him—
she trembled with rage at the
Idiocy of It—someone must have
said, "Mrs, Marshall's in New
York with Mr. Elliott."
Slip thought of the phone girl,
and choked. That’s who it was! It
had to be! She'd put In the long
distance calls, she was the one. all
right. "I could kill her!"
Who. dearie?" asked Mrs. Lar-
kin. Her indignation had faded
somewhat 8he had her teeth in a
juicy little problem, and she was
enjoying it. "So you were In New
York, and they told Mr. Marshall.
Ah. I see."
"But that must have been this
afternoon, before the office closed
Martha said painfully. "W7ty did
Bill come here so late tonight?
What could he have been doing,
here in town?"
Another thought nagged at the
back ol her mind. Tills was Tues-
day. Never before had Bill sc
cured a pass for overnight leave
on a week day. "Maybe he came
here to apologize, to beg me to go
back , . Maybe he got a special
pass. .
The realization of Bill's regret
at their quarrel—the knowledge
that he'd come all the way Horn
cam]) to see her at the office, per-
haps to beg her forgiveness, to
make it up—smote her like a blow
"And I wasn't there I That moron
•resentment, hostility — and a
wavering gratefulness that she was
trying to help. Sick hurt at Bill’s
wild suspicions, at the violent and
senseless way he had acted. Fear
for his safety, fear that his head-
long rage would get him into
trouble. Where could he possibly
have gone?
"We must look for him.” Su-
zanne said, rising. “I—I hate to
case of Robert Borst.
Borst received a 1941 license
plate with exactly the same letter
and number combination he re-
ceived in 1940. He merely stood in
line, drew two other sets of plates
for relatives, and then was handed
plate number WF-11-41 from the
hands of a clerk who was a stran-
ger. __
•FOR WOMEN',
ONLY!
If fidgety nerves. restless nights and
other distress caused bv functional
monthly disturbances keep you from
having fun at such Hines—take Lydia
E Plnkham's Vegetable Compound-
famous for over 60 years in relieving
weak, nervous feelings of women's
"difficult days." WORTH TRYING I
stood on the porch, shivering, her
fingers pressing the bell. Almost
immediately, a light flashed on in
the hall. Through the tiny glass
panes of the upper door, Martha
saw a pair of silver mules come
down the stairs, and then a quilted
satin bathrobe. Suzanne herself
was answering the door.
Suzanne's eyes, through the
glass, were not astonished at meet-
ing Martha's worried brown ones
Then Bill had been here! Suzanne
seemed to know all about It, for
she flung the door open. "Thank
God you're here! I told Bill you
weren't In New York!"
"I was In New York. I flew
back Oh, Suzanne, he was here?
What did he want? What was the
matter?"
"He wanted me to tell him what
hotel you were at. He was crazy,
out of his head. Said he was going
to New York after you. I tried to
Chesterfields are made
with one aim in view. •.
to give you a
good paints portrait
NORMAN, — iBpeclali— Leonard
Good, assistant professor of art
at the University of Oklahoma, Is
painting a portrait of Jean Perrec
Chouteau, founder of the first
white settlement In what Is now
Oklahoma. The portrait will be
placed in the Oklahoma Historical
museum. Oklahoma City.
TYPEWRITERS AND
ADDING MACHINES
SALE -* RENTALS — REPAIRS
New and Reconditioned
HENRY BEHNE
Typewriter Dep t. Phone 2*0
Relief At Last
For Your Cough
Creonuilsion relieves promptly be-
iuse It goes right to the scat of the
goes rljd
trouble to help loosen and expel
germ laden phlegm, and aid natun
to soothe and heul raw. tender, In
flnmed bronrhinl mucous mem
branes, Toll your druggist to sell you
a bottle of Creomulslon with the un-
derstanding you must like the way It
quickly allays the cough or you are
to have your money back.
CREOMULSION
for Coufhs, Chest Colds, Bronchitis
gnu
TODAY and TUESDAY
EL CARO
TODAY and TUESDAY
10c ROYAL 15c
TODAY und TUESDAY
fbm.
AMECHE
' ilMtfi Sf/ft *
AM rm: umiMDA
They hit the mark every
time with smokers like yourself because
people have learned they can count on
Chesterfields to give them, without
fail, a smoke that is MILD . . . not flat
... not strong.
Chesterfields are a pleas-
ing smoke at all times because their
COOLER, BETTER TASTE comes from
pUf * the right combination of the world's
best cigarette tobaccos. YOU CANTj
BUY A BITTER CIGARETTE.
h
| m
DICK SHAUOMNISST, only NoHsnsI All Osugs
Skssl Champion to win the till* twits, hat held
•II ths major ihssl litis* In Ihs country.
CMISTIMI110 hold* all ths major
tills* fof (making plsoturs .,, Ihsy'rs t
MllD*a,COOll* and lima IASTINO. VI
It * ths ergsrstts that Jolnbsi.
l^77*y
Cf
DO YOU SMOKE THE CIGARETTE THATjp,
...ITS THE SMOKERS CIGARETTE
C«grttight 1WI, Uail A kilts* l«s*u
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Dyer, Ray J. The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 49, No. 309, Ed. 1 Monday, February 24, 1941, newspaper, February 24, 1941; El Reno, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc924848/m1/3/: accessed March 28, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.