The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 63, No. 163, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 7, 1954 Page: 1 of 8
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Tueptl'
The El Reno Daily Tribune
Single Copy Five Cents
<U.» MF.AN8 UNITED PRESS
El Reno, Oklahoma, Tuesday, September 7, 1954
UP MEANS ASSOCIATED PRESS
Vol, 63, No. 163
J
Chiang's Forces Raid
Mainland in Crippling
Air-Sea Slap at Reds
FIRST DAY AT SCHOOL
tion, other than to point
hand*” who have already
—Thia candid photo was made today at Central elementary school. It need* no interpreta-
out the aomewhat amuR expreaaiona (at right) brought on by longer experience of “old
been through thoae trying first hours.
Formal Signing
Of Asia Pact Set
Agreement Reached
On Principal Issues
MANILA. Sept 7 «P>-Eight BO-
: ,ar:una * pact cmwi at lull*
Ing aggremion Ui A*ia today vu-
tually agreed on all oulaUndirw
Imun and KhMuM the formal
ah nine for tomorrow
A reliable source* Mid It teemed
certain there would be no final
hitch In secret proceeding* but d»-
tevatrw Kill were sweating over the
ex*»t wording of the key clause
o«M Holdout*
Thia Involve* the military commit
menu to be made by the Unite.4
Btatrv Britain Prance. Australia
New Zealand. Thailand. pgkiaiai.
and the Philippine*
Ttalland and the Philippines were
reported huding out for a NATO
type agree me ui under whuh all
■nembei. would come uivt.mily to
the defuse of an/ member at-
tacked
The Untied Mates a aryuing for
a pact muter which each membri
would raort to an alia:* or anoth-
er within ila own conatitutianal
framework
Arltete Adapted
Deleta*e« today adopted an article
at* ung that nation* "by mean* of
conUnuoua and effective self help
and mutual aid will maintain and
develop their individual and roller-
live capacity to real*! armed attack
and to prevent and overcome eub-
yervitr activity directed from with-
out againM their ter 11 torts 1 Intoxtll)
and political stability.”
The informed aouice aald ap-
proval came after Thailand aban-
doned demand* to include *ubver*lve
activity within a nation aa well as
out*Kir IU borders
Chicago Shipped
Billionth Animal
CH1CAOO Sept 7 -<UJb- The
MUloiith animal to arrive at the
Chicago atockyarda since Its open-
ing la IMP. waa aoM today for II
pound
Pevetd. Humboldt. Iowa.
'*^ughl hi* 1.154 pound Hereford
■"*%» throuah the gate* of the Mock-
"■’■U yesterday to complete the Ml-
'''•|iih animal mark
•"•William Wood Prince president
W the Chicago * lock yard* will give
Mevold an I1.IM check al welrumlna
jLretnonle* today The dollar-*-
fl.ntnd price la more than four time*
Wisher than the market average
"f During IU M year*, the Chicago
has received more Chan joo
million cattle, more than M million
cahrea. more than half a bClon
hoga. and about a quarter-tuition
By • ______
rive tit pink
J^.tenry Reginald Pope. Oklahoma
V chained with |«»*iii# In a no
L»li>g ton* on tl A M. four mile
**at ol El Reno on Aiui n »m
load 110 and MM mat* In the
Bill of w P onus. jusUoe of lha
iuiii|il*iiii was in*U* by
Paging Pogo!
Frogs, Too,
Say 'YoualT
CAINESVIIJ.X Pis . Sept T —
<U b—Progs and toads not only
carry on animated ‘'conversa-
tions' with each other, they also
develop regional accents, a Texas
sclent!*! said today.
Dr W Prank Blair and gradu-
ate student Daeid Pettu* spent
month* maklnt magnetic tape re-
cording ol frog talk They an-
nounced their finding* to the
American institute of bio logical
scientist* at a meeting here.
Blair said the tape recordings.
Mipplrmmird by "*ound pictures"
of the frog calls. Indicated (rags
employe special “language" to
*peak to each other He said that
often the analysis of call* provides
a more accurate tdentlftcatiun of
specie* than external physical
characteristic*.
"Our finding* Indicate differ-
ence* m calls play important parts
In preventing free interbreeding of
closely related speclaa of fr<w> or
loads ' Dr Blair said “Burn In-
terbreeding in *om* tnstahee*
would have harmful effect* on a
wtldl!fe'a*populaUon *
He mid that after "Interview-
ing" frog* in Texa*. Oklahoma
and Aruona he and ^ttu* also
found that frogs and toad* de-
velop regional accents
Soviet Attack
On U. S. Plane
Is Before UN
Security Council Is
Asked To Convene
And Study Incident
UNITED NATIONS. N Y. Sept
1—t**'—Tile United Ststes put Ita
latest cold war brush with Russia
before the united nations today.
U. 8. Delegates Henry Cabot
••®dg*. Jr . asked for an "early meet-
ing ‘ of the security council to take
up the shooting down a U 8 navy
plane of I Sibrrtu Saturday by Soviet
Jet fighter*
Lodge returned unexpectedly to
New York from a holiday at hit
Beverly, Must , home to mske the
surprise move He telephoned iu«
tequest foe the council meeting last
night to Pranciaco Urrulia of
City Students Open New Term,
But Three Less Than Last Year
El Reno’* public achool student*, —2,353 of them—went
to Mchool thin morninir. many of them seeing the inside of s
classroom for the first time and hundred* of other* another
year nearer to graduation.
Paul R. Tsylor, superintendent of city schools, said the
numtier was only three lens than the 2.358 enroled last year,]!1
il«-'|iite wride fluctuation at many individual school*. 'r
I*argest drop was at Booker T. Washington school where
' the enrolment plunged from
226 last year to 206 by open-
ing of class period* today.
A slight inrrraar snowed up for
CHINA
Mli'HOVV
FUKIIN
WM
TAtPCI
KIKUN
ktro«T 100.000 fl
ITroofs massed here!
FORMOSA
"TAhlAN
Church Aids
Hospital Fund
Members of the First Presbyter-
ian church have added another ma-
jor boast to the Park View hospital
operating fund this week
The church donated MM 71 to
the hospital through a apertal fund
collection headed by B U Rector
Lon C Booth, president of the
Park View foundation which arcepte
money for the ho^stal. early had
announced that no house-to-house
campaign a being planned but that
any person interested in contribut-
ing may make his donation* al the
office* of the Oklahoma Oa* and
Dec trie company. Oklahoma Natu-
ral Os* company. Bell Telephone
company‘or at the Jackson market
Annunl l*almr Day
(iolf Content* Playtd
In annual Labor Day golf acUvi-
lla* at II Reno Country club. Mr*
Floyd l-»i<1y and J B Rwaim won
tow net Ut the mixed foursome*,
while N O Da via and Tom Hopson
tied with Mr* R N. Dulmage and
Don Barne* for low grow The Dul-
mage- Bame* team won an extra
hole playoff
In the approaching contest. Mrs
V. R Mnrdy and Olsn Brown were
winner*, white Mrs Monty rams
back Sunday after norm to win the
women* match, and Mr*. Art Marti-
•on wan low net.
In the 11-hole play for tow grasa.
Paul Ms*nn won with a 74. and
Oeorge ateeaun got a 7I-II-M fur
low net A. El«KiU* Poll* tta* low
net on nine hole* with ta-lt-U.
Holiday Toll
On Highways
Is Cut Back
By Tailed Pveae
More than SOO i*raona died vio-
lently during the Labor Day week-
end but the traffic death total was
the lowest in six yean, a survey
•hewed today.
Traffic death* touted 1M for the
prnod from lyn Friday to mid-
night Monday, the lowest for a
three-day Labor Day holiday ame*
M3 were kilted In IMt Drowning
accounted to M death*, plane crash-
es kilted II and miscellaneous ac-
cident* M. for an overall total of
Ml
The national aa/eiy council mid
the traffic death total, though
t'axlc. was "d*finitely encouraging
because it followed a downward
it* nd ol traffic deaths in Amer'cn "
Survey* have shown that MO to
persons are kitted during a
tluee-day. non-holiday sum met
weekend, depending on the weather
The safety council had mad* a
pre-hoiktay eKlmete that 390 per-
■dim would be kilted In traffic
The pad weekend » death started
out at a slow rate Aaturday. shot up
Sunday night and Monday morning.
tl«en audlenty lapeted off
Texas led all the stales with M
traffic deaths California and
Michigan each had 23. Illinois 31.
New York and Missouri each had
M. Kentucky II. and Ohio 14.
Five From EHS
On Cameron Tearn
Former K1 Reno hip her hoot
football stem have attracted scouts
from the Kales top three colleges
during the year* past but little
Cameron junior college at Lawton
appear, to have enticed Ute largo*!
number of RMS graduate*
Cameron Coach Jess I1mm»|muii
Saturday aw aided arhoiarohip* tor
Ute second year to aophomme reg-
ulars Paul Hauser and Don Jlmer-
*on. and three more freshmen from
K1 Reno. Dave Ratliff. Bobby Val-
der** and Kenneth "Otae" Davts.
Jlmeraon has rented a regular
berth at tettend lor the Cameron
Agate*, and hard-hitling Hauser la
whit* schools, with teachers enrol-
mg 3.147 this year compared to
I.IM last year.
Taylor said that white a break-
down by claasee was not yet avail-
' able, enrolment by school* showed
111 enroled at Central grade achool.
compared with 140 but year, and
174 at Irving achool. compared with
IM last year
HlMcreK Add* Arad*
An increase was noted at HUIcrest
school, which rose from an enrol-
ment ol 43 but year to an enrol-
ment of 114. due largely to addition
of a fourth grad* class The school
latest addition to the city system,
went only to the third grade to the
past school term
Lincoln grade school dropped from
an enrolment of 340 but year to 307
but Rose Witcher grade school roar
from last year * 144 to a total of
174 for the new term
Webster grade school had enroled
M0 by beginning of classes today,
only two lea* than the number reg-
istered last year.
Rural enrolment for city grade
school* was I.IM. an increase over
laat year's 1.117.
Hlgborboel Drop*
In the Junior hlghachool there
also was an Increase, with 347 reg-
istered aa compared with IN but
year, but the El Reno htgharhool
enrolment declined slightly from M7
last year to 0M
Taylor reported that a prelimi-
nary survey Indicated very little
croerdtng. with same few classroom*
noting possibly three above the
standard number of student* How-
ever. moat classroom* had far teas'
than the maximum for the leeching
results, he mid
Laat year It had proved necessary
to transfer 14 student* from Lin-
coln school because of classroom
crowding and these students were
enroled Uiu year on the asm* basis
but Taylor said Indications are that
student* affected may be able to
return to Lincoln this semester.
Open III Dav
Meanwhile city ethoola continued
plana to keep rlaeae* In eetwlon both
mornings and afternoon*, despite
the fact that school* in many cum-
in unities have been dosing a I let
noon became of the heat
Taylor said no complaints have
been reported from students or
Columbia, the II-nation groups
I president for September.
“t nprevoked Attack"
Aide* on the U. S delegation aald
he would follow up with a formal
request by teller today.
In a brief statement from hi»
delegation headquarters. Lodge aald
he had asked the council meeting
to consider Uie situ*lion arising
fiom the unprovoked attack by air-
craft of the Soviet Union over ut-
ter national water* "
Nina of the tig U. R crewmen
abroad the two-engine Neptune
patrol bomber weir rescued un-
harmed after drifting all night on
a raft. One man. Ensign Rogrt
Henry Reid of Alameda. Calif. ap-
parently went down with the plane
Ne Warning Alves
The survivors aald they were on
a routine patrol mission well off
the Siberian coast when two MIO
Ift jet* oiiened fire on them without
warning With one wing on lire, the
Plane crashed and sank In the
sea The United Stales protested
the attack aa "wanton and unpro-
voked" in a strongly worded note
to Russia
Before IU delivery, however, the
Soviet foreign office had hqndrd
U. 8 Ambassador Charles t Hob let i
w protest charging that the U 8
plane had flown vrtUun the Soviet
frontier* and opened fire on two
Soviet fighters which approached
N. The Russian note aald the Red
Pilot* “were forced to open fire In
return"
RaUd (> Caae
However, the United Stale* ap-
peared to be seeking tune to com-
plete Its case against Um Russian*,
but atilt anxious to beat the Soviets
In the Initial punch should the
Kremlin also decide to take the In-
cident to the UN.
Revised accounts of the Soviet at-
tack. released in Washington yes-
terday. indicated that the Ameri-
can Invwttlsation was still In pro-
gram
’jZzPoiiiic Qcwm;
CHINESE NATIONALISTS RAID HOMELAND—Gen-
eralissimo Clint iir Kai-Shek's sea and airforce* * truck
the China mainland, followinjr a series of Red attack* on
the little inland of Quemoy and threat to Formosa. Na-
tionalist atrontrhold. Early report* indicated ChianR’s at-
tack was aucce**ful in knocking out a fleet of probatde in-
vasion ve**el*.
Military Boats
Destroyed Near
Quemoy Island
Day-l-onic Attacks
Scatter Suspected
Red Invasion Force
TAIPEI. FORMOSA, Sept.
7 —(UP)—The Nationalist
Chinese announced today that
a combined air-*ea attack
' blasted Red artillery and
I troop barrack* near Amoy
and de*tmyed or damaged
I more than 100 Communiat
I junk* manned around Nation-
aliat-held Quemoy inland.
The Nationalist defense
ministry said Generalissimo
Chiang Kai-shek'* airforce
| and navy bla*ted Red tar-
! Ret* in a daylong attack.
| The r<unbilled forces sank a Red
gunboat and five large motor Junks.
They damaged or Mihk 100 other
war Junks, the Nationalists aald.
Troop Centers HU
Troop barracks near the Red Chi-
| nese port of Amoy werw damaged,
as were troop emplace menu around
the port and its surrounding Is-
land*
Hundreds of Nationalist airplanes
' took part in Ute attacks along with
Gossip Columnist FailsTo Name
Person Handling Secret Papers
WASHINGTON. Sept. 7—(AP)~Walter Winchell tes-
tified today he doe* not know who Rave him a copy of the
2'* puRe document Senator McCarthy pre*ented at th« Mc-
Cartny-army hearitiR*.
The newspaper columnist waa called as a witness at
ItearinR* by a special senate committee weiRhinR censure
charRes airamst McCarthy.
Senator Flanders has charRed that .McCarthy’* and
Winchell’* possession of the document, a summary of confi
dential FBI information pre-
I iwred for the army, involved
| |si**ible violation of the es-
• piotiaRe law.
When first questioned about It at
today-* hearing Winchell refuted to
to tell who gave him the document
Hr aald he would not dtecloae hi*
new* sources
Writer 'Not Sore'
But Senator Watkins 'Republican.
Utah'. chairman of the special, ax-
member committee, prasaed him
; further and a«ked him If ha know
| who gave him the document
"I do not know." Winchell replied.
"I am not sura *
Gunman Kills
Valuable Calf
County MtertfTa officer* wer*
seeking Information today leading
to the parson who shot and kilted a
valuable Hereford steer belonging
to Walter Loreaaen. southwest of
IB Reno
lorenaen said Uw IM-pound calf
waa found dead, apparently kilted
Instantly in a pasture near the
road going by hi* farm It was kill-
ed by a small-bore rifle
County Sheriff Tiny Rny*e re-
minded hunter* today that It la Il-
legal to fire from a roadway and
that It la aho against stale game
laws to hunt dovoa with a rifle
He promised the "full treatment"
to any person seen violating those
laws, and *UII more to the perann
responsible for killing the calf If he
la found
Rural Homes
Burglarized
OverWeekend
Two rural home*, one east of Un-
ion City and another east of Yukon
were entered by burglar* over the
weekend Both home* were lucked
•nd considerable property *«* tak-
en
The sheriff'* office aald thieve, , --------P---------
entered the J H Letay home, seven i am not aur* * I
mite* east and a half-mile south | Winchell went on to my spertft-
of Union City by ruiUng * window : rally that It waa not McCarthy who
•cieen The Joe Dudek home, four ' gave him the copy of the document
mite* east of Yukon on the 14th He .aid he did not think any
Kreet road, waa entered by the I member of McCarthy'! staff had
same manner
Letay reported the lorn of a Philo
radio, an electric clock, a large elec -
tric fan. 15 pounds of moot from
a free art a lad tea artist watch, bed
linens and other Item*
The Dudek* apparently suffered
the biggest lorn Burglar* there took
an Electrolux electric * wee per and
attarhmoAU. a 414 gauge pistol,
a ladies “hunter" type watch, a 11-
Jewel Waltham pocket watch, two
•ulU of riot he*, four pairs of khaki
pants, eight shirt*, a fur-collared J
leather cnaL leather gloves, two
wool comfort*, two large .ultra***
fitted with clothing four billfold,
one containing about 1100 in old
large-Mae bill*, and several other
Items.
Deputy Rhertff Friday Preston
•aid both homes apparently were
entered In Uie same manner
handed II to hun. although he con-
ceded he waa "not aura" of this.
Last May. Winchell wrote In hi*
column that he had received a copy
of Uw document and had burned It
after consulting with yartoua gov-
ernment official*
New Charge Wade
The special committee weighing
the censure charges against McCar-
thy mad* public Flander.' new
charges at the end of the morning
Weather
Duvi* will he an auallinry toft
tackle, white 110-pound Nobby
Vskiers* will give some of Uw hef-
tier Aggie* a run for the starting
tight halfback slot
The Cameron squad will open
posted unlikely school, would cinq*
here unless the heat increased !
PONTN IM BOND
Jama* E Artnout. 43. of the J«>
Work on North Footer |meted 4M
their season on 8ept IT In • home I bond in police court on a charge of
•land agoiiwl CuIUmM* A. and 14 , i assault aud ballet>. polka ratted*
War nor. jiiiowad today
Hlsle Pororaal
Partly c toudy through Wednesday
with araltered local thunderstorm*
In the mat and south central por-
tion* tonight Little rhanae In tem-
perature Low* tonight from lha
no. In the northwest to near 70 In
Ute anutliaoM. limits Wodinndwy in
lha M*
Florida, Bahamas
Alerted for Storm
MIAMI PU.Nept 7-tAA Hurri-
cane warning* wer* hoisted over
the Bahama island* today and south
Florida waa ptaeed on Uie start as
tropical storm Edna gained a force
of go to 10 mite* an hour about Mo
mttea onutheaat of Miami
Heeding U. B weather bureau ad-
vice*. the Colonial meteorological
offtoe In the tourist capital at Nas-
sau ordered Uie ominous twin Bed
flag* with Mark renters hwteted
throughout Uw Island chain which
»li*tufi*w lu wlUilii 60 mile* ut Uie
Florid* roust.
Flanders. It was disclosed, wrote
a tetter dated Re pi 3 to Chairman
Watkins 'RepuMlran. Utah' Con-
cerning McCarthy'* attempted uar
In the McCarthy-army hearings of
• summary of confidential FBI In-
fix melton about subversive risk, at
the army'* Port Monmouth. N. J.
radar laboratory
Flanders said II waa hte conclu-
sion that cither Uie person who ob-
tained Uw dor omen i falsified It or
McCarthy himself waa reopnnMbte
for fa IK tying It.
Return? Murray
Says 'Si, Manana
OKLAHOMA CITY Itept 7 UP»
—Oovemor Johnston Murray, a big
hit aouth of the border a« a state
department good will ambassador
to Mexico, notified hte office today
he will extend hi* two-week lour
The governor, who waa to have
returned during the wmkend. aald
ha postponed the flight hortW lu
alUikl elate uaiuttuiilM wt Ute City
ui Toluca
'strong" naval tore**. Ute defense
ministry aald The warplane* con-
orousted ou Uw junks, which prob-
ably would be uaed by the Chinese
Communist* as invasion craft if
they attempt to take Quemoy island.
It mile* off the mainland and about
•even mile* from the port of Amoy.
Artillrrv It target
The navy pounded Red artUlery
position* which had shelled Quemoy.
The Soviet-hulll coastal tuns open-
ed up on Quemoy laat Friday and
•helled Ute Island sporadically
throughout Uw weekand
Heavy explosions and towering
flame* were reported from hil* on
artillery and ammunition dump*
scored by the Nationalist planes and
naval guns. All the Nationalist
plane* returned safely to their base*,
the defense ministry said
No naval opposition wa* reported.
VIHsge la Bombed
The Nationalist* claimed that a
village north ol Talon went up in
flames after Nationalist pianos
raked Rad pool lions there with
bomb* and racket* and naval gun*
blasted the area.
The air-sea aaeaull was described
by the defense ministry as Ortteral-
iMimo Chiang's first "major retalia-
tion against thr Red* for bombard-
ing Quemoy Two American officer,
on Quemoy werw kilted In the Red
•helling.
Thr rombtned operations began
at dawn and continued throudlhiut
the day. the ministry reported.
Drivers Keep
Police Busy
A single automobile accident and
* variety of traffic* charges were
■mi rerurd in Uie my polk* depart-
ment today I showing Uw holiday
aoekond.
The autamobtte accident, about
■ Mam. today at the in tenser tion
of Rock Island avenue and Fire-
man street canard about 134 dam-
age to a bus. driven by Charles
Hawkins 34. of Concho, and about
•135 damage to a tor driven by
Ram Moore 75. of «B North (Hand,
•nd owned by the Cone Motor com-
pany. Yukon.
Moore pasted IS bond In polled
court on a charge of filling to
yield right-of-way
fn other police court traffic roam
Virgil Wallace Burk. 30. law tot own,
Mont. pooled 55 bund during the
srekend on a chart* of speeding.
John Fish. tA. of Oeary route I.
posted II bond on ■ charge of im-
proper perking. Lester Ray Boyer.
18. of 1304 West Wad*, posted 110
bond on a chard* of reekteoa driv-
ing
Danny William Mandle*. 15, of
Ok City, posted 15 bond on a
chart* of speeding, white Marry
Van Tungetn. ■ Reno, pasted 414
bond an a charge of permitting an
nnltrenmd notwan to drive hte ve-
hicle and Vane* t HteU. 4k of
Cilia. Ohio, pu*led Is bund set e
uhaig* al ipanting
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Dyer, Ray J. The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 63, No. 163, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 7, 1954, newspaper, September 7, 1954; El Reno, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc920521/m1/1/: accessed April 23, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.