The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 61, No. 84, Ed. 1 Friday, June 6, 1952 Page: 2 of 18
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ay,'June 6,
fil fcno (OMaJDaily Tribune
Short Stories
About Hbrtie Folks
BY TRIBUNE CORRESPONDENT
PIEDMONT. June 0—Members of
the Women's Missionary society
entertained with a bridal shower
Thursday night in the Baptist
church basement honoring Miss
Lyda Richardson, bride-elect of
Jimmy Walter of Edmond.
The linen-covered gift table was
centered with a large vase of white
roses and red carnations.
. Miss Doris Eades assisted the
honoree in opening her gifts.
Those present were Mrs. Edward
HUbum and son, Qene, Mrs. Betty
Lunch of Bdmond, Mr. hud Mrs.
Elmer Has ley of Cashknfc'Mr. and
Mrs. Roy Biggs and children, Mr.
and Mrs. Harry Dickerson and chil-
dren, Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Eades
and daughters, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest
Stridden and sons, Rev. and Mrs.
P. H. Kanton and children, Mrs.
Lottie Wiley, Mrs. Mattie Miller.
Mrs. Maude Dickerson, Mrs. Anna
Biggs, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Garten,
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Biggs and
children, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Harter and son, Mr. and Mrs. Oscar
Peterson, Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Burg-
man and son, Mr. and Mrs. David
Richardson atld-children, Mr. and
Mrs. Lloyd Biggs and daughters,
Lois Ann Childers, Mr. and Mrs.
Moyer Dunbar and daughter and
Mrs. Lee Pickard and daughters.
Refreshments were served.
Mrs. Albert Specht was hostess
at two tables of canasta Thursday
afternoon.
Mrs. U P. Specht and Mrs. Ed
Washecheck won the prises for
high score and Mrs. John Whelan,
sr, received the door prize. The
guest prize went to Mrs.. Elmer
Beck and Mrs. Melvin Specht of
Gossett, Mrs, Stewart Eades and' Mrs. Kathfcrine Laoranger ana
Mrs. J. T. Burkhead. Henry Gardner of Oklahoma City
Sunday dinner guests in the horde visited Friday with Mrs. Mattie
of Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Gilmore Miller.
and daughter, Eileen, were Mr. and Rev. and Mrs. Vernon Graves
Mrs. Hart Harper and children of and daughter and Richard Cole of
Oklahoma City. Oklahoma Clt^ visited Sunday with
Monday guests were Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mr#. Floyd Biggs and
C F. Randolph. Mra * H. Bing- family/ f
ham and daughter, Virginia. Mrs.
D. H. McKee, Mary EUen Gray of
Bdmond, Mrs. C; D. Johnson and
children of Blackwell, Mrs. Eddie
Redd and children of Tulsa.
Robert Dillon of Memphis, Tenn.,
spent several days with Mr. and
Mrs. Dick Wiedemann and family
and other friends and relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. Manford Dickerson
entertained with a picnic Thursday
evening at Will Rogers park.
Those attending were members
of the Junior Sunday school class.
Mrs. Dickerson is the teacher.
Guests were Marilyn Eades,
Donna Biggs, Shirley Kanton. Har-
riet pickerson. Myrtle Biggs and
Charlene Richardson.
e a p m
Supper guests Friday evening in
the home of Mr. and Mrs* Fred
Shepherd were Mrs. J. S. Shepherd
and sons of. Meeker, Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Enterline and daughters
and Mrs. Ursa Enterline of Ed-
mond, Mr. and Mrs. Quimby Howe,
Virgil Enterllne and Mr. and Mrs.
Lonnie Luschen. .
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Gaasaway
and sons, Mike and Butch, of Tulsa
spent the holidays with Mr. and
Mrs. Bill Stout and daughter, Pdtsy.
Mrs. Florence* Devitt, 403 West
Wade, has returned from a 10-day
Visit In Nevada,-Mo., where she
attended a family reunion of the
Anderson family. Mrs. Devitt was
the house guest of her cousin. Mrs.
Nell Anderson.
Hospital Notes
Mr. and Mrs. S. R. Fouts. 312
South Moore, plan to leave Satur-
day morning for Chandler where
he will attend the reunion of World
war I company B, 14flth infantry,
36 division, formerly company B of
the First Oklahoma division, June
Mrs. Herman Stack and Mrs. D.
B. Brook of Shreveport, La.; Mrs.*
L. B. Medlin of Baltimore, Md.,
and Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Aston and
children, Alice and Lot* is, and Mrs.
Aston’s mother, Mrs. Maggie Aston,
all of Charleston, S. C., are guests
in the home of Mr. and Mrs. W. T.
Sturdivant, 918 South Hadden. Mrs.
Stack and Mrs. Brook are sisters of
Sturdivant, Mrs. Medlin is a niece
of Mrs. Sturdivant and Mr. Aston
Is her nephew.
Photo by Powell-Owen Studio
E. M. Brown
Know Your
Our Summer Hours
9 a. m. to 1 p. m.
Open afternoons by appointment
— — R
irelond studio
Tf M. BROWN, manager of the
C. R. Anthony store, came
to E3 Reno April 16 from Snyder,
Tex.
He attended school in Sayre,
and is a member of the Lions
club at Snyder, and the First
Baptist church here.
Brown’s hobby is photography.
Married, he lives at 133 North
N, and has two sons, Grant, 5,
and Craig Lee. 2.
ss
sharply on the barbed-wire compound
Mrs. Jerry Crain Kelso of Tuc-
son, Ariz., is visiting in the homes
of her daughters, Mrs. Stanley J.
Oallaway. and Mr. Gallaway, 901
South Hoff, and Mr. and Mrs. Otto
Hess In Oklahoma City.
LATE MODEL
Short Stories
About Home Folks
Mrs. Virginia Jennings, 403 West
Wade; Mrs. Glen Oneth, 321 West
Wade, and Mrs. Calvin C. Outh.
619 East Wade, spent Thursday in
Norman where they enroled in sum-
mer school at the University of Ok-
lahoma. They will work on their
masters degrees.*.
WALLPAPER — FAIN
Get Oar Lew Frices
Union City
Mrs. K. C. Dennis who is en-
route from Roswell, N. M., where
she was a member of the public
highschool faculty the 1951-52
school term, to her home in Min-
neapolis, Minn., is a guest in the
home of her aunt, Mrs. W. E. Far-
ley, and cousin, Mrs. Etta L. Mc-
Lean, 802 South..Barker.
COMPANY
contentedly over the forts where
several divisions could be emplaced
In case of another war.
‘‘There are jio soldiers now,” a
local farmer said, “but as you have
noticed, the guns are oiled.”
METTZ, France, June 6 — (U.R) —
France’s Maginot Line. lil-starred
memento of the nation’s shattered
dreams of peace, is back in the pic-
ture as a primary target in the
East-West cold war.
Miles of flaking concrete pill-
boxes nestle against the once more
resting
Sergeant Jack Sanders returned
Wednesday from Korea. He was
net at Fort Sill by his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Bill Sanders, and Mr. and
Mrs. Ollis McMahan and accom-
panied them home.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Drew of
Fort Worth, Tex., were overnight
guests Sunday in the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Bill Sanders.
Mrs. jack Lewis spent the week-
end in Enid.
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Boevers of
Oklahoma City have announced the
birth of a son, weighing nine
pounds and five ounces. The baby
has been named Chester Lee.
were - Mrs. Addie
MmmuL snot cam/
'known*.'* local
Srivms ' STARS
• * • m #• •
Oklahoma City Mk
FAIR GROUNDS ■ |
SUNDAY, JUNE KJ
Time Trials
1:30 P. M. J |
Race 2:39
ADULTS $1.50 CHILD 60c
.Inc. Tax
Mrs. Leonard A. Weakley, Jr., and
son, Wade, of Kansas City, Kan.,
are expected to arrive Saturday
morning for a visit with her par-
ents, Mr. and Mrs. Paul E. Strate,
1101 South Hoff.
strategic German frontier
like wounded veterans their rusting j
turrets in the sun. ! Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Oler of Tulsa
Here and there a battle-worn were week-end guests in the Pftd-
French 75-millimetre artillery piece, dock home.
rifling protected from weather with Mr ftn(j Mrs. Walter Maxey of
a fresh coat of grease, peeps from a Enid were week-end guests of Mr.
pock-marked turret across fertile and Mrs. O. H. Radcliff.
fields still strewn with grim rubble gUnday dinner guests of Mr. and
and souvenirs of the last great var. Mrs B Q Holliday were Mr. and
Good Protection i Mrs. C. J. Von Tunseln and chil-
You can buy a IT’ Zenith TV
complete with federal tax, sales tax,
warranty and outside antenna with
NO MONEY DOWN!
. . . and Only $15 Per Month!
FREE HOME DEMONSTRATION
. Mrs. Ted Ownby and daughter,
Ernestine, 914 South Ellison, will
attend the wedding of Miss Kay
Kroutil and Clarence Wright, jr.,
in the Methodist church at 8 p.m.
Friday in Yukon.
Barbara Brown, 1131 South Miles,
spent Thursday in Stillwater.
ELECTRIC
DAVIS
Private Sidney E. Ashley of Fort
Sam Houston, San Antonio, Tex.,
who has spent a furlough with his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ethan A.
Ashley, 703 South Macomb, and
Burke Mordy left Friday for Ard-
more where they will witness the
Ardmore Open golf tournament
over Domick Hills course.
SINCE 1910’
Phones
115 South Bickford
Mrs. Lynn Holman of Geary was
an El Reno visitor Friday.
OPPORTUNITIES
for High School Graduates
ONE AT HOME, ONI AWAY
The Deardorff Oilers play the
Hydro softballers under the lights
at Legion park tonight while the
Shlve’s club plays at Watonga.
Thursday night’s tilt here showed
the Reformatory shellacking the
Page Aircraft squad, 10-3.
Enroll now aa a atudent mine. You’ll re*
reive one of I bo beat professional cdura-
tioni, yet one wblrh you ran afford. Aa a
graduate nurae you will have almoat unlim-
ited opportunities for a lifetime rareer —
security, with a good incomel And you'll
have prirelesa training to help make you a
better wife and mother. See the Director of
Nurses in your local hospital or talk to your
School Guidance Counselor now.
Published as « public service in co-
operation with The Advertising Council
Records
Can You Identify This
• '$ • • • • a
Mystery Farm From Last
Wednesday's Tribune Farm
Who Owns Mystery Farm No
Tax Consultant
Public Accountant
11614 S. Rock Islaad Phoi
TNI MAYTAO CHIIPTAIN,
America*• Rnsst low-priced washer
. .. a genuine Maytag in every
reapert. $129.05
Are you taking part in The Tribune’s Mystery Farm contest? You have
a chance to win a prize every week just by identifying the Mystery Farms
as they appear each Wednesday on The Tribune’s Farm Page!
Why not enter this interesting contest this week and every week?
Remember it is the first CORRECT answer that takes the prize—not just
the first answer. If you recognize the farm home shown above then you
should enter this week’s contest and take a shot at earning a prize this
. * 1 * ? ^ » * ?. • i
week and building up your points for the grand prize at the end of the'
first 13 weeks. Enter now! Your answer may be the first to be correct!,
If you are going to put your wheat in the government
loan, we would like to handle it for you. Or we would
appreciate buying or storing any part of your grain.
THI MAYTAO MASTER,
fluent Maytag ever! Huge,
square aluminum tub haa e«*
Ira-largo capacity. $189.95
THf MAYTAG COM-
MANDIR, with large,
aquare porcelain tub.
Kant, efficient Gyra-
foam action. $159.95
We have install^ a grain dryer and would
be glad to have anyone who is interested
to come out and look it over.
• Let Us Dry Your Seed Wheat •
Now you can have a Maytag of
your own—for little more than
you’d pay for the lowest-priced
washer on the market! Kasy
monthly terntt ... liberal trade-
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Why wait any longer to enjoy
the easier-washing advantages of
a Maytag? Come in today for a
demonstration.
7 on June 11
Watch tor Mystery Fa
WE ARE OPEN 24 HOURS
CONTEST
ENTER
COME
RALPH HENSON. OWNER
205 South Rock Island
Phone 126
TWO MILE EAST ON HIGHWAY 66
%
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Dyer, Ray J. The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 61, No. 84, Ed. 1 Friday, June 6, 1952, newspaper, June 6, 1952; El Reno, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc925517/m1/2/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.