The Oklahoma County Register (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 47, No. 7, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 1, 1946 Page: 4 of 8
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CROSS ROA :
IINWY Dattlage
Although accompanied by none of
the fanfare of the first surface test
the tilidITWalvt explosion of the
ktomie bomb in Ilikini lagoon pro-
luced et-wally startling results with
the one Aollarge sinking no less
than ten ships and heavily damag-
ing six others
Hours after the blast the 1A'atcr
of Bikini hi goon remained too hot
from radioactivity set Mt by the
Do int) to pernlit close huipection Of
the damage Clouds along a 30-
mile front became contaminated
With tit011ile particles and naval ob-
tervers (10cliised that rain from the
mass could be tleadly
A massive column of water hur-
tling more than a mile Into the Pa-
title sky anti a thick sheet of
yray and steam that rose to 9000
feet followed the detonation of
he bomb vhih was touched off by
radio from beneath a medium land-
ing ship
Veteran of two world wars the
21000-ton battleship r k s s sank
Second Bikini Bomb Wreaks
Heavy Damage OPA Renews
Power to Keep Prices in Line
lieleoe1 by V'(-tern Newp4vr
NO Er heti opinions ars espressetti In thrsti viiturnhs thrv
Nestern Nesyspaper heMAI Anat)stti WWI slot Eitiet—isitrily ta this DO Np3per I
Indian coolies unload cargo Of precious grain at Bombay !Write
by the first of a fleet of twelve U S food ships the grain rill partly
ease India's severe food shortage
ikT011IC CONTROL:
Russ llejectiin
WEEKLY NEWS ANALYSIS
Even os Bikini reverberated kvith
the explosion vf the second atomic
bomb test in the Paedie Russid
turned thumbs down on the T S
proposal for international control et'
the atomic energy
Addressing a closed meeting ef
the United Nations atonne energy
connnittee on controls in New York
Soviet Representative Grornyko as-
serted that the LT S suggestdon that
the veto Le ellminated in Monde
regnlidion could not de itcciTted
by I isi because it would tend to
Elestrey the principle et' unanimity
among the nig Five in preserving
posLiviir peace
Griot-121w also rarped the propor-al
for establuilling an indtrfrd-
cnt agency for the control of atomic
energy declaring that the UN se-
curity council consisting et the 1"ig
Five as pernt4nent mernhers pos-
Sessed beth the pmver and ink ans
to detil Nvinl the !trotilem
REPARATIONS:
Pauicy Reports
Farther friction between the U S
bud Rtissia loomed after Edwin
Pauley's revelation that the U
S was considering measures for re-
enforcing the ':iIiincharian economy
at the Soviets' expense follov14ing
their whfleside stripping of indus-
trial etpCpthent j1 that country
'
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FOREST FIRES:
Waste Resnurces
itercha fta hie Um be r y
griwth not yet tnerehimtatile and
acres cl s edlifigs vila‘d in all at
mere th:1 $51)00000 were among
timber resource ltssks that V evt
tlri w ltiolie the year Li43
AFTroxitniiIel:e 2 7 uer relit ct the
1945 forest fires on protected areas
were reperted as el iricendiary
' ' -
' 41
4- g'
1
Tons of water shoot skyward as
atomic bomb Is set off beneath
surfa(v In Bikini lagoon
within live minutes et the blast and
the :33010Ion airerillt earner Stra-
toga also 'tvcnt down The bailloship
New York the -lap dreadnaught Na-
gato and the destroyer Hughes anti
transport Fallon were severely erip
pled by the charge
11)110:
3 3
!
4
on 1:ise
1po
ftdt paralysis ithe 17 S public
health scr ice stated that di expects'
r epidemic to occur th'i4
CISk S are 11"rt
amilig a do imr !lum-
ber 3::12 cases
ported so far this vtr coiiipared
vith 203 for the same perrid in
ard 2:320 in 19-41 ile
k‘erSt year for polio For the vecit
ended July 20 6-It flew cases wcie
reportcd compared With 403 the pre-
ceding week
Auiprehtinsie over spread of the
disease public health officials issued
these precautions: Avoid fatigue
and plunginii into cold vater on hot
days delay mouth nose and throat
operations (serve personal clean-
liness wnsh fresh fruits and vege-
tables carefidlly and be en the
watch for such polio symptoms as
upset stomach diarrhea vomiting
headache f 'r or s:Lits of a cold
Urban Transit Heavy
Passenger traffic on urban
transt Iin s in the United Stites
is coldintung at its Wartirne
:cak deste the lifting of re-
sinethns on Frivate itutomo
13des
The nation's V9240 street
cars trac'Eless trolley coaches
arid is t uses carried mere
than 922500000 vassergers
fiTirn January to May cf this
year
Lack in the U S alter a 49000
mile trip iiround the world as Presi-
dolt Truman's reparations commis
Pau ley said that the U S
was pondering the permanent sus
pension of shipments of surplus
industrial plants from the vestern
zone of Germany to biussia to off-
set deliveries of Japanese equip
ment to looted Manchuria
Declaring that Russian seizures
had thrown industries valued at two
billion dollars in Manchuria out of
gear Pau ley said that the reduced
productive plant wnnild set almost
a billion oriental people back a gen-
eration in their economic develop-
ment unless the damage were re-
paired OPA:
'lack in I
)usiness
No sooner had President Truman
signed the compromise OPA bill ex-
tending the agency until June 30
1917 than it swung into action to
stabilize the national economy
which strained with the removal of
cunt rols
Passed after tin' President
had vetoed an earlier bill the
compromise in contained
many provisions designed to as-
Mire both producers and distrib-
utors of adequate working mar-
gins Illietvever it modified the
original Taft amendment which
!NO Truman charged fluid al-
lo manufacturers unwarranted
profits by setting up ceilings
based on 1910 prices plus in-
creased costs
The three-man super price con-
trol board set up under the meas-
ure to determine tat commodities
shall remain under regulation faced
the task Of deeiding whether to per-
mit the automatic restoration of
meat livestock milk cotton seed
soy beans and feed to supervision by
August 21 At the salile time tile
board tvas to determine NO-tether
ceilings lie reimposed on eggs
poultry petroleum leaf t Lice() or
their products
To Secretary of Agriculture An-
derson went authority under the
eow op tan tl price airieffitural
brodoets subject to CV It"V of the
contiol board
OPA was striploal of
1111101 of its former powers it
retained the authority to 11110
011 manilla( turers price in-
creases awl regulate rents Al-
though the bill direted that
wholesalers iind retailers must
be allowed ceiling's adequate to
cover current costs profit
IIIS e'l'e held to March :IL
ItiN els
I:aps Farm I:atrs
Interstate commerce cotrmi'ititt
representatives conductuot littitutt(
)Ti the railroads' r a pi r-
mataint 25 per celd inrflitiff ri
A Seandri
president of The Milwati'e
avtr thit livt!d(wic 0!ric11711r:1
produebt should no hewer lb fa-
vored by lower lartirt
Bonding (!It the iiirfiree of
these to the cal) (els
Seandrett said tbat ries( nt low
rates have been iin nie Hoch
Smith ri alutiori adoptA tin late
Itittft () ail(
in tetrieultore
Come incl( Lei! 1diiit d
eiits twice Ft to and au an-
tivipated skiel(tmoi in me reeord
wartime volume titti tihi re-
quest for a peririm if 25 1 er rent
rate be(et would soti lart the t
pordry rilw of fi 1fq- cc!It
emlimodWes IIU1 1lLr t t
rieultural products
flit Tel-rot-Ism
Bitting the use of vielenee de-
signed to alter Britain's position in
the tieklih problem of taitting up
a Jewish homeland in Arakiliimi-
nated 'tidy Land the Labor ei(v-
ernment released a viliite paper in
London purporting to show that
prominent leaders i't the JetAdsti
agency for Palestine had unified
underground organizatinns for a
reign of terror
Basing its contentiows oil inter-
cepted messages b( IWC(in high
agency officials in London and Jeru-
salem the government said that the
first co-in'clinated nut break if vio-
knee closely followed a communi-
cation revealing that the three main
undergronnd groups had been
linked together for joint action
Mi(anwhile Jewish leaders in
Palestine met to devise means of
controlling the extremist elements
responsible fur the wave of violence
culminated by the bombing of the
King David hotel in Jerusalem with
a loss of more than 100 lives
HIVElt PitOjECTS:
flu ge Ilacklog
When President Truman signed
into law two bills authorizing flood
control navigation hydro-eleetrie
and other river improvements at a
cost of IWO billion dollars he esti-
mated that along with other such
work previously approved it would
take 35 years to complete the proj
ects at the 1917 appropriation rate
While opponents of the hills de-
scribed them as Folitical pork en-
abling congressmen to return to
their constituents with claims of
improvetnents and expenditures for
their arc: President Truman an-
nounced that he would not request
any funds for the projects dining the
fiscal year
Estimated to cost $300000000 the
'ilissouri river basin project N'as the
f 1
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4 '
V- - 1 ' 3
3
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I
TI IE OKLAHOMA COUNTY REGISTER
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ff n i 4 CL- — ' "-! '' ' - ' 1 I
d- It i ''': 77' i L-- --i - ' ---1
I
4
l'tunian hands pon to
Syn I'Vskrrtin 310npiinti
IVasli) at ti11t alter signing riv-
er imptoement bilk Elip John
ritnisin ‘Drn 71iss)
ontheriiied in iht Oth-
tirs ells in the ()lino
at a cmt 'Fi
it iiy $ I I i
lowki pi
$7(100000
Piditieffl i'qaketip
Ileforts of Geegi 7int-
1e's ilLnusa1 s chh f of the givat
11ed iirmy aril his transtor to it gar-
rison cenuniinit n )Ir--a were in-
terpreted s eviii! nee of the Com-
inunist olots to stremdhen
restwa pesdion A 11ussni and
to strip the powerful irilitary
ef nalizenee
Precedent fr the deniefen of
riussas No 1 slilier lay in the
subordinatien of Marsbal
ukhachesky from top leadership
of the strong Red army he had
built to n insiniticant previn-
chit command before ins execution
It also was said that Zliliko V had
lost Stalin's favor beciiuse of Mc
breakdown of lIed army discipline
after vief ry had been von As a
result of the Soviet trs' man-
handling of conquered l'eor!ii and
the looting of their possessions Rus-
sia has suffered a huge 1'ss of bresi-
tie i1 easicru Europe
DIPHTHERIA:
Shows Increase
The number of WI hs
in 93 1arg U S cif ahs in
creased by lei uNLr the 213
figure of 11141 iteeeri:g to thti
Journal of the American INIedd-al
association
la a threeyear report covering
1913 1944 and 1L)45 the Jia'nal stat-
cd that for tho ft whict
plitheria
data are sihee Ii123 there
occurred 311 deaths from ch
1945 more than for
year since 19l)
VALI
1111:C11
1 1 :
1-!(11!1- I)
:tt 1it4t1-(
"()1 Cut11--:e 1)1:!"
if tilt
Lny tHlt
1:Ivc
s:(1) 111
ut: T011 ui oh: It
on "Vigr
an:1 11iry
t)Ir:-:1'1inia
11: lir per-
Nkoll hor
ir lqun n
Viar Hit oiior
Lido) th:it Woyrs ay-
ta: on the nir again
--:—
Joan 1::dwartl:i 1Iiinatos that she
:Wont 20 hours a weok Vork
igg out tochnical prinr to
Iiir actual singing tini(' of 12 min-
Wei on "Your 11t Parade" 'wing
a th()111Igh ITIIISiCian S1)0 '14V()11U3
irraggi-rs nn musical di:lads of the
C'Trt"'
t t r
itk
JOAN EMVARDS
orcheAral backgrounds to her
siings rehearses in various keys to
get the right one Epends hours on
getting a good mike balance be-
tkveen her voice and the orchestra
Next time you hear Joan's effort-
less performance remember that
she put a lot of hard Nvork into mak
ing it seem so casual
A role in "The Short Happy Life
of Francis !Macomber" lured Regi-
nald Denny back to the screen he's
been too busy to act Ile made
model planes as a hobby then dur-
ing the Ivar he made them for the
army for identification purposes
Finally he converted his plant to
make jet propulsion models
Lanny Rmis scored a hit at a re-
cent concert in Chicago hen his
sang Strauss' "Emperor Waltz"
01 le erilie said his performance 1‘31
better than the lyrics deserved—not
knowing that I:oss ISTOte the lyrics
himself winter the name of Robert
Matt hen sl
'—
It sitrided fine that plan to piint
Reny Iiidtion and the i s if a cho-
rus lino lacquer ler Me
Casino de Paris finale in Para-
nmanrs 'Perils of Paulne" lt it
had ta iihoodi iied -Petty and 12
of the lit dirmers Wert' 14)
tile gkdd
is I eiit
si-ene Its
Spring' t of
ci the vias hathel
in axig pnit the siddie
on the sireem A proli
'Alid-'Iiadiay yrs' as he fit ta
a niut:ri1 of 1!-1111Ti
he "Ca dir
ta!!es it and
to adyway-
--- :—
Sara !laden is pla!ing- her 11nd
hard-lioded secictary to a star in
"31r Ace" itS hal1111L11(1011 In S:0-
Li Sides' :ardL say her frigid
mien has made her tine of the tel-
Ida:tors li tim thu colona anti
"At the end of a da's Ain-1i as a
froen-tate I go home and it la
front of the mirror and Past laugh
my head oil ICS GC let tty of
retaxiog ''I'''' hi k hen 1 isremv-
thAt 114 !t 111411n1114' FU 11V1' tt 111:4'it
tip again"
a ftir Wdrner
r
$W17(' "a 3()i' a sta Lin dd!ait
ariic in 11I twit to give Jodn
Cra 0 ford sonic sper it law! din
‘N as Icsted as a possbility
pictures and given this ratanz---
-Iiiiicult to t iwirarh Na (d'a-
rnatio tlaality Thin hair rtior
sed-!ng
Ntt IC
type 1)inccs 11i ralTIO
I tti
Ol)VS IND ENDS 1711
Heil LI ill 14 'ir a hathitte suit the first
time yri the set-cell tfl '1'1110'1On
Rt'el eli ITT 11-11011 rippeur
IP Ole 11N0 stVi0Me iloe111
If nwiced at ail JIii I 1111
"10 Fach Ott a" is hanntIns! rums
)101 lot an 001h
ioned leather libtarv chatr fnr his home
Siote ptavs her mast tm-
partaot romantic scene with Bah Holas
in "It here 1 here ttetiring
011 144110110d utolen niOit 41trt
3$1 of 1:obert Cd
ners star Is n dav fr pan
ning gold in the thlts Of his father's
ranch in Sanland
Erides' 2-Cent Tips
Cause Redcap Crisis
7-1 inti-- — Fr(iin now on
'ilo l'i nv)-rs' Ari 00ltoty will
do tho tipHtot for G I in ides ar-
t t front :1trtis l'In-! eltinge
irz tr 1It! :1'or r doxitft corn-
i ! Lo(I Intt too t1 ry Et11
::k utf:ItHFftr vilh Attotriu:in
11:!wy 1:ivf! rt--irit!1 t I-11g
IAhl ttit r1 1:n':ol of :-otto:oos
:) zt t ort ! t 1 ip
VTN 7T-Tk
kdnianl I
YCZW Now ee
(rcat Atifch1 PripIs to
Re!tore
— As a result
cf l telinini
('ii pupils for birth
7drs tiiin see
for the firct time in 17
t Hid in the weal to her is
r whom she now
is able to see for 'tin! lirit tore in
thior I happy niartileil
credits hcr husband
with lindant the ineilicid assistance
which neide poscible resitoration
her
The eperation was performed in
tvvo staites Iy lir Loins hrfield
of the Wills hospital staff Ditelvin
A Sulky superintendent of the
hopital said the doctor attributed
Airs litavis' blindness to infection
vhich had caused the is to adhere
to the capsule of the lens
Normally the iciis iicts as a cant
shutter over the lens but in
'Allis Davis case it kept the open-
ing alnoeit conirletely closed The
new pupils were constructed to the
side el the mound' ores So far
only 10 per cent i:1t1 ItZIS been re
stored hut there is hope for im-
provement As In from seeing her husband
which Davis said was her first
arid imtgest thrill she is looking
forward to chotising her on
clothes a task formerly done by
Walter and it netithhor
She also is tible to see movies
for the first time in years Her
husband v t to lake her to the
rill!Vit'S to hear the dialogue ex
pliuning hi ter Jost vihat the story
chicken Farms Vie to
Raise Meatier Product
NVW — The au4ly duckling
and the thdt ad he goldcn
cgt Ci t011 nudting way for a
third glainour lovA an unborn chick
with a $3000 tag areund his neck
It tray show up lu a backyard hen-
house in New Jersey or at a Kam
sas hatchery for the amateur has
opportunity with the professional
chatkttn grower in a three-year in-
dustry and government backed
CO mpetition
l'or 30 years emphasis among
breeders has been on bettering egg
praduction with the rosult that
chicken for Sunday dinner has been
a byprodnet at a business that
triiiA'S $2670000000 annuafly
For many years the flitiltlitt per
eapila chicken consumption was 19
pounds but in 1943 it jumpad to 23
pounds and has hover d at 23 piemds
since
Called the "Chicken of Tomor-
row– eritipatitiou trie
cent:rue throuch
The main specincations bred up
for tornorrows chicken iirti ihitt it
have more ilesh on the frame he
fine-tkAtured !II t:!jlurt d1:dly
zinci be !-ut'Lcietiy 11edtie1l‘e for
wholesale tiosont
Tell of Serious Food
Outlook in Philippines
MANILA P L — Frank S Gaines
chief of the UNItItA trassatn to the
'drys recently took issue wth
recent stidements a former Presi-
dcrt Ildovor tu 1)I1'1 that the Phil-
ippines tod SLttiat1011 Is compara-
tively good Ilte told the Philippines
I( (it' of fereCitu a'Itirs that an
acute food shortage seems laoly
Gidin t)ii days wtilt the rote out-
rot tit' rcr cerd under the prear
Irs Irehe Murphy sista r-in-law
tde Statti supi eine couit
bnitice inal head of the Itrtvate
Viir lichcf said
rcrt00s have died starva
tdri nt 1y iii the northorn n
inttahlatits –and 50000 more face
the stnte hrii rrospect unless re-
lic! comes quiedly"
Gaines saiti I nv Gartrols were
derrivinitr Furepe of traich rceded
fats and oils through failure to
tiihte production Ile said mil-
lions of coconuts ore rotting on the
grcund and hundreds ctf plantations
reniam covared hy jungle because
local rroclucers do not Gild to sell
at the contretdd I rico
!Japanese Are Charged
With 20 Million Deaths
SHANGHAI A Chinese war
crimes investici:atiCal committee
blamed !or dciiths et an
ustimat2d 20- million Chinese dur
ing eight years (if'
IThe comniiittee thaking a survey
(cr the war thinistry and the executR-ci
Yuan s1 the deiiths eccurred
las the result cf aduA ri:artaie and
It also reported 24 million others
—nearly half of China's entire upu-
lation—"sliflered directly tLrough
Japanese actions"
s
wcv410
ELMER TWITCHELL
ON RESTAURANTS
11(1)
to) 111t2 Itchrt re-
I 6N:tr thi (- l
() 1-t'1! 1)11!- to
the
do my sivtre ea tin! in mid-
dlo class eating places" said linter
Twitchy today "and it is lily con-
viction that 111111 it the operators
are glorified dog-wagon Mill I
arn Do chef myself hut I could 1441
up better dinners till an old broom
and a hin kPf of suitch-grease"
----
Iniwr was nude sete "What's
beg Me Of the
rant proliriehir who wiinted things
rivht? Whatever harlichcd to the
(Mut who had pride in his vairk?
Where is the old fashiincd
vho knew hinv to mix a drink
ight?" he demanded
"It's years since I have run
across a proprietor who has a con-
sience thinks it important to hold
his trade and won't water the soup
cut down the portions more titan
necessary or feel upset if he dis-
covers the potatoes have not been
served cold
"And 1 am not referring merely
to the Grade 13 restaurant Some of
our best clubs are now employing
cement mixers as chefs
"I had a business man's lunch at
a private elub last week anti I still
can't figure if the manager and chef
were former pi feeders or just a
couple of boys who confuse human
beings with seagulls"
——
Elmer wanted to be fair ''I ad-
mit it's hard to pet foodstuffs" he
concluilA "but it seems to me the
boys should know what to do xvith
it when they get it"
Ex-Pfc Purkey in
A Quonset If
Dear Ed:
Well now I know how it fetls tn
live inside of a egg or even inside
hr-dr a egg The wife and rne has
just gut one (1 them Quonset huts
We already got roundshoulders and
we stoop over eVeri Nvhen standing
up
-I -
After you have been in one a day
you have ri 0 more doubts zibout the
VI) rid being round Already I ion
working on a book which I will call
''The Half Egg and I or maybe
"Life With Low Ceilings" The first
thing you got to learn is not to get
off a chair too sudden You can
tell how long a couple has lived in
one of them huts lay the bumps on
their ring4ins
A reA love if rccr-sary
accunt (of if a couple do Ntly Selfir-
rito! there is 111 ne!:t1-11 corners to
ZiflUr
(letItr
lit:111 is at tho 1( Jf Lc:i!t!1 tift-
u 14 ihettlits iti the 'Atttte 11tte Ile
h13 ihliteLl 10 l'1tHh Ii: i (10(1)
Ian ire itt vct itio
The Italian' roamed the streek
cryintt "Itoxtti tlith 'itmrit ti Eng-
l'rauct told
item
Fourth tiovkn no gain!
Ihe tvc!lit!: the Pre-:(1t si-tw
a 1!::vio G(ts
) fr 11:m
tt GI In
A liZusiAti In'wpaper man visit-
ing this country sa74s he saw S100
hoses of (itttrs sohl here
Nonsense' it just the impression
ariyhii0 gets I rum looking into a
cigar case and tring to locate
something for 111 rrnts
-r-4444-ruer Lou-1 racs are up 1)4-4m
15 to loo per cunt )11 uvcr Arnerica
Hotels U)4)t v) re on the verge ut
cloramt us a retilt 4)1 the war years
have hei))!ded better times t)y jump-
ing rxes in some cass (rem $24)
tor tvo reolle Ur a deuble room to
$65"—News dem
Eltnor T vent into one the
other day ard asked for a room
vith cr ss and a view of
Ihi biirch'n Ile rcports that the
hotel in linen Washington once
slept has ion-wale the inn where tiven
a Bucket(ller barns nr
AINT ir so?
"Too Few Collego T achers Are
linzpired Sprii'Ker News
Itena
Brother its h r (1 to he inspired
When youre underpaid and tired
—Larry Slge
The United Natinrs is still hut-
Dig a site for a rerrnanent hainne
How ahent Dochi:e Cily low a?
We know a fellow ho weuld write
his congressman but doesn't knew
hovf to spell OPA
THERE are many details or itri-
1 pit-Lint items in sport that are
beyond all human undrsboaling
AA this doesn't only mean hors( s
that run last in ore
F-777-77"w77 rare atat thf v11
th- r vt t cuL it
i - - - dor-zn't 11-rol a
F
Conn
- w a s couiLlenely
fear' is in
Loins Alio
had been comp! Ic-
ly : ring
' Jo r e r w o w s
it no v n a s drad
C Etfl(r viinor and yet ap-
iimired to he in te
ror in the recert heavyweilit
flaseo
suppse we take up the case of tho
New York Yankees I happened to
Le in the immediate vicinity t:f
the Yankees the Red Sox and the
Tigers fir several weeks in Florida
this spring
Everyone figured and this includ-
ed Joe McCarthy Bill Dickey and
Larry Macrhall that the one pos-
sible weak spot in the Yankee line-
up should be their pitching Spud
Chandler—and then who did they
have? Their defensive fieldimt was
an established fact Thi art
couldn't miss
What about the Yankee offense?
Nov you must admit that Joe Mc-
Carthy Larry Macl'hail and Bill
Dickey are three rather smart op-
erators as far as baseball is con-
cerned Offense? With joe riMg-
gio Charlie Keller Tommy Eon-
rich Snuffy Stirnweiss Joe Gordon
Nick Etten l'hll Rizzuto Johnny
Lindell Bid Johnson Aaron Robin-
son 13111 Dickey—here was the last
and least worry The Yanliees had
their full share of fielding defense
But above all they had something
more important—their attack—their
offense—their power at the vlate
AlacPhail and Dickey
all admitted this Nothing to Nv(rry
about in tile way of a run-making
iittack Stirnweiss had led the Amer-
ican league at bat a year iigir—hl09
DiMagelo was a normal hit-
ter Etten Gordon and Iltairieh
were at least 2ll5 hiders Kellt r
was a 300 hitter Rizzuto had bet
a 310 Litter The team averiee
should have been around 2i1i or
t y 111- 4 F fl k t!
!A( !s q y
r
t ) ii dd
Look vt the 1:co 7ox
Vi ctin't 11 tin r yy:its
Leca:s in tne
sinitrcr intcrini Int 111d Live
ti1actid five l'ittets the
ten The Ya i“ais have Del en:y
hitler- Charlie 1-11H1vr-i-ialrt:
the first 10
Yon'tves have 1r n
ts110itiy 1"‘ier than the
vere IF lt'41 whin they IACI-0 kr
as the -Ilit!oss Wiciders " It t
"11i11ss 1-11 Via11-1
Nick Arck and Dee 1iVhit
were I i'ickihg four a'd
gdIs
If Lry tklice nt tke 11 Ya:
tet's d
ktid up in the :2-tit
tn:hy a kiLll onie titciv 1! st
cd have Feet' saved YH8 ania7-
tcvt rsi1 tif I irm has the usiu11y
sake and aii1e Dickey batt1tikl
1111 betrtit a vet ran kvIlo has al-
'used his head ct-in tindc‘tancl
1:4(-) or th7-ee nxnlbers of m in
a thruc-irro'"11s s1tp 1A as he
Arkanas hcad he can't
quite understand 10 or 11 frem
17e tiattunii fiirgetting what the old
a!11 lirniture means and how it
su(uld Le used
Allystery of thr l(ollccs
So v hat happens? Nearing the
end of July the team batting aver-
atte of the Yankees is under 231
They ridie far lielow the thleties
rind the Vhde Sox Outside of Char-
lie Koller they stand with a flock
of 233 hitters taken as an average
Yot most of these players were once
dangerous (ach time they moved to
the plate Thoy were hatters to liti7
fearod Teday almost tiny 0110 With
a ritilit or a left arm st1I hanging
on can stop thorn cold
Vtetit hits happened to the elilraid-1'111(q1
Yankee
call:: every naimber of the n(Intd1
a friend of mine It (an't Iti:Idcri
of (ln:diet) or I Ick detoiriarti-
hon they have
On a thoy
Firemit n t iit r
fool Lever 'Han ftroi'l :
llil in y f I Tii ir
tine AAlnop :s
at titiit litHt 1H y C17:1 h
Y(11 C:4ht e
naiii inth a
can anyone ex:
tin lath!
rt lit! T i
on Alma tirit tilt t trf
Imp to liana:AA tael-t hoiciiy
'fly f-e thAtH'h:1
St PL trt1
titily They r
ztheint of any trainini't :e
dan:t holiove A i:1
tc tot oii:y a
part r
ti thtre
u ph
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Bonney, W. C. The Oklahoma County Register (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 47, No. 7, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 1, 1946, newspaper, August 1, 1946; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2301828/m1/4/: accessed May 27, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.