Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 57, No. 109, Ed. 2 Tuesday, June 4, 1946 Page: 4 of 15
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Entertainer Dies
Open Fo&nni Enlightening and Filling
Perry’s Steaks Impress Writer
ft
nold Foerster died Monday.
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Death to Pests!
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Bug-a-boo
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'YIdjcsaacVli/?
Catch to It •
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with
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$5.95 to $16.95
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OKLAHOMA CITY
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and Grocery Storet
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To Stettinius
COLD WAVI
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It'S as simple as this
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Callouses
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CROWNING GLORY?
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D- Scholls Zino-pads
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■MMMMMOHMNnaai
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Giant Flying
Boat Slated
For First Test
■
Sold by
Department, Drug, Hardware
ask roe ceowNiNo atoev at ail dsug stoics ano at cosmctk
ANO NOTIONS COUNTESS IN DCPARTMINT STORK
Super Insect Spray
Flies, mosquitoes. ants and moths
haven't a chance when sprayed
with Bug-a-boo! This super spray
will not spot or stain drapes, walla
or furniture. Easy to use and hai a
pleasant, pine-like fragrance.
>l« N. Br«*S«*y
Ilia W. Caaiawrre
.. plus tax
— complete
with curlers
for the retirement of
Mean. who has been
■toee
the navy and war depart-
pUed the engines and in-
re-
rsist for
jped in
. ea«y-to-take P-W tablet* act
-----way io remove Pin-Worma. So
don't take chances with the embarrassing
recta! itch and other distress caused by
these creatures that live inside the human
you suspect Pin-Worms i
P-W and follow the directions.
' RFC
ctflnate describe the mo vine as the
HOME
IMPROVEMENT
LOANS
As Successor ’
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Oklahoma City Times _
Food Waste End Aunt Het
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Explosion Kills Five
SYDNEY. June 4.—(£»)—Three Aus-
tralian soldiers and two Italian war
prisoners were killed at the Bathurst
army camp in New South Wales Mon-
day in an explosion believed to have
been caused by a mortar bomb in an
ash heap.
LIBERTY PLAN
107 and 109 N BROADWAY
I
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K
I
Declaring that improvements in re-
frigeration. storing methods and pre-
packaging of goods for the retail mar-
ket offer hope of some ultimate re-
duction in spoilage waste, the educator
iterates:
' The biggest gain would be In sal-
vaging the lower grades, all the way
through the distribution process "
Another Indication of efforts to cur-
tail loss is given by Harvey Baum,
purchasing head of the Atlantic &
Pacific food chain, who declares the
Bug-a-boo
GAR DEN SPRAY
Kills or controls practically all
troublesome garden insects. Easy
to mix and highly concentrated—
4 ounces make 12 to 18 gallons.
|j|
a
n
• Painting and Decorating.
• Insulation. Weather-strip-
ping and Caulking.
• New Roof
• Home Repairs and Alterations
Any Amount Necessary, |5t and Vp.
Following is the second of
a series of dispatches on the
state of the nation by Lyle
C. Wilson, chief of the Unit-
ed Press Washington bureau
and an expert reporter of
the national scene for 20
years. He is on a tour find-
ing out what Americans are
thinking and talking about.
Acticr. of the board
Monday ni seen a*.
but there Is no assurance it will fly.
Army. Navy "Oat"
Army and navy aviation officers
tecpttil patients, plus a full staff of
doc'.orr irsea and equipment.
project on the ground in the
another war it can carry up
To
down.
avoid
------ the
said it will
4_________
disclaon responsibility for the project.
) They
l,EMfe ...___
cm the government's
quest to -942 but did not sponsor the
project '
SI X|—TUESDAY. JUNE 4. 1946
: | W I I 4-
nmbhh
GM Directors Pave Road
For Sloan’s Retirement
KBW YORK. June 4 —<JP>—Alfred
P. 8k>en jit. has been re-electet^chalr-
Okan Qt General Motors Corp , but has
relinquished his post as chief execu-
tive to Charles E Wilson, who has )
been renamed president.
—~r - T----— • -e. J -W
. v ’ I - ■
I
Spurns Film*
Georgette Windsor, above,
lovely New York style designer
and painter, prefers her own
carter to one made in Holly-
wood She turned down a film
contract offered after she had
appeared m a Washington,
D. CL history pageant.
I ,1 — .........
YOU HAY ENT A
CHANCE-1 SEE
A BIG DARK MAN
WITH A CAN OF
Bug-a-boo z
food waste since the advent of
mechanized civilization, "there is a
tendency to let production go up. and
not watch waste Larger production
is achieved if waste is not watched
closely.''
f"" O-
V t *g
Wheat Shortage
To Close Mills
cent greater than tn March 1944
That is a measure of the upward
tempo of northern Oklahoma busi-
ness.
But Russia kept crowding into
the conversation. If these men
fairly represent the opinion of this
part of the country, the Russians
are bluffing and we are being too
easy with them. On an around-the-
table poll of the question: Should
we get tougher or firmer with
Russia, the consensus was that now
is the time to get tough.
Hall summed it up:
• ' We ought to deal with them
now." he said. ‘ We'll be in better
shape to do it now than 10 years
from now when we have let our
national defense get way down."
Red Backdown Seen
I did not get the idea that Hall
or any of my companions wanted
war with Russia or expected it. But
Ruaaians
before a
and that
them to
I
Ss
§
.4
Il I
iis-iisjessm o. Three Hinted
You can treat yourself
to a perfect, soft, natural-look-
ing permanent—done at
home—in three hours or less
with the simple, ready-to-
use Crowning Glory Cold
Wave Permanent Solutions...
Simply put your hair in
curlers, dampen each curl
with Crowning Glory
and, in less time than
you believe, you have
a lovely new permanent-
ready to set in your own
most flattering style...
And all you need is —
/
I
they did feel that the
would back down a bit
firm diplomatic opponent
now was the time for
back.
These prosperous men and their
town and county are just about as
wild and woolly as a suburb of Co-
lumbus, Ohio. Ringler’s leather
goods store next to Marcy's Gem
cafe has a touch of the old west In
Its windows. His poihmeled saddles,
quirts, spurs and such are for sale.
But they don’t ride horses much
here: mostly automobiles, trains
and airplanes.
Bugaboo
-.Moth
'i-
I
H
■
&
•y
Coi__
I gY'aramtzko__
• vesei«bl« compound
of directors
paving the way
the 71-year-old
operating head
RELIEVE THAT TORMENTING
PIN-WORM
ft is no lonrer necessary B
to put up with the ■ ■ ■ MH
trouble caused by Pin- ■ H I'
Worms! A highly effee- • ™ ■
tive way to deal with this ugly infection
has been established. Ask your druggist for
P-W. the Pin-Worm tablets developed in
the laboratories of Dr. D. Jayne A Son.
The small. ~
in a special s
rectal itch and other distress caused by
theae creatures that live inside the human
body. If you suspect Pin-Worms, get
JAYNE'S P-W and follow the directions.
Your druggist knows : P.W for Pin-Worma I
f IM AL POR CHILORIN’S NAIR, TOO
The dainty softness of your little girl's hair
will be accented by a natural-looking Crowning
Glory Permanent given at home. Crystal-
clear Crowning Glory Solution* ace as effective
and easily used on her baby hair as on yours.
Heads ‘Cheats’
Chairman of the University
of Pennsylvania trustees. Dr.
Thomas S. Gates has been
named to head the Commun-
ity Chests of America. He will
lead the national promotional
effort for 849 Community
Chests in the U. S. and Can-
ada during their fund-raising
campaigns to be held next au-
tumn.
I _R______ _.
Rtjproxutiately the Mae of a football
i A ——• aavirs^s <t ■ wi«J»
vriu
Veterans Get All Jobs
Of Beggs Pickle Maker
BEGGS, June 4.—GPj— L. J. Morgan,
owner of a pickle canning plant here,
announced he plans to hire disabled
war veterans almost exclusively to
operate his factory. He said he had 50
jobs for veterans with almost any
type of disability.
The catch is a wall-eyed
pike and it weighed 5 pounds.
The lucky angler is George
Paus of Harlan. Ky.
..WHEN YOU GIVI YOURSELF A
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NEW YORK. June 4.——If mom.
dad and the kids wouldn't be quite
so fussy for a little while about what
they eat. the world's food shortage
could be eased greatly says Dr. Har-
old F. Clark, economics professor of
teachers college of Columbia Univer-
sity.
Commenting on estimates of gov-
ernment officials and research inves-
tigators that 25 percent of America's
food supply goes to the garbage can,
Clark said that much of the waste is
caused by the nation's high standard
of living and the fact that Jhc public
has been so educated that highly nu-
tritious but lower grade foods cannot
be marketed
♦ Little Time Left
"If we had 10 years in which to help
increase the world's food supply, it
wouldn't pay to tighten up in such
fashion." he points out. "It would be
better to extend our production plant.
It we want to make gains quickly, say
during the next year, it would be in
this way. It is anybody's guess, but
possibly a 15 to 20 percent gain could
be obtained by taking lower grades."
An analysis by William Kling of the
war food administration, placing the
overall food waste at 23 7 percent
shows that no food is waste-free and
for all foods 9 1 percent is loot on the
farm after production. .9 percent In
transit, 1.5 in storage. 4 3 in process-
ing. .8 by wholesalers. 2.4 by retailers
and 4.7 by the consumer.
"What agricultural economists have
tzi Aa 11 normal u-oetorro '
“I try to be neighborly. 1
when I see a dog in my own yard I
draggin’ off one o' my hens,
right then I stop bein’ a good
neighbor.__________________________ ages and to |>roduce flour for export. ■
ent OPA administrator
was Porter's employer.
"Yeah. I'd like to tell him about
it." said Donaldson, and the others
grimly agreed.
Singletary said you couldn't rent
a house in Perry. If you wanted a
roof over your head you had to buy
it. Hall contributed that houses
were selling upward of 100 percent
of their cost or normal value. His
bank holds the mortgages on most
of those value-inflated homes. So
I asked him how he felt about that.
"It is all right." Hal] replied.
"The mortgages are insured by the
federal housing administration ”
Most of them were angry about
one thing or another. But no one
was feeling any economic pain.
Tax Collections Vp
"So long as we have 82 wheat
we won't complain." explained Gang.
Hall chimed in that sales tax col-
lections for March were approxi-
mately B9.000 and exactly 43 per-
Judgmg by the latest
fashion trends,
women will be
“wearing the pants” -
for a long time to
come’ At Sturms are
slacks of incomparable
value . . . designed for
comfort at home, lei-
sure. or sport. Man-
tailored . . . perfect fit^n
for women ... in a
variety of colored fab-
rics for summer. Sizes
10 to 20.
will be
i the re-
propellers
i I
by. Instead more acreage is planted.
British Deny Yugoslavs
Mobilizing in Trieste
LONDON, June 4 —OP>—The for-
eign office said Tuesday the British
government had no reports from the
Trieste area of Italy which in any
way supported a Ixxidon Daily Mail
dispatch saying Yugoslavia had de-
creed a general mobilization.
The spokesman said some increase
in tension was ex|iected. but there
appeared to be no cause for concern.
The mall published a report from
. its Rome correspondent asserting
“ Belgrade newspapers published an an-
nouncement of general mobilization in
Yugoslavia. The allied occupation
zone of Venezia Giulia around Trieste
was said by the Mail to have been
declared in "a state of emergency."
Pain, Burning, TwMhnmi Or Mtem Off Feut
Speedily Relieved
For quick relief beyond belief, aak for Dr. .
Scboll’e Zino-peda. These thin. downy-eaft» 9
soothing, cushioning, protective pads instantly L
lift pleasure from the sensitive I loot. You’ll K
marvel bow they relieve painful callouses. F
burning and tenderness on tbs bottom of
your feet ... bow the separate wonder-work- K
ing little Medications included quickly remove F
callouses. Easy to apply. Stay on in the bath.
Cost but a tnfle. At Drug, Shoe. Department. ' i
Stores and Toiletry Counters. Get a box to-
day. Insist on Dr. Scholl’s in the yellow box. •
Iti i Eitil.
I Jki^
project The sponsor was the defense
plant corp-iratlon. later taken over by
'Rm' MR. they point out.
While dlaclaimmg all knowledge of
eonatruc'lon details, one army colonel
expreawKt surprise the government
approved an "exorbitant" outlay of
»1 500 Odo to move and water-test the
plane "when everybody knew it had
rx? businew being built 28 miles In-
land in the first place." He said the
830 mini on cost would make it pro-
iilbitive fof mass production. . -
Kaiser Withdraw*
Originallj projected as the Hughes-
Xatoer flying boat, Henry Kaiser
withdrew from the project six months
after its start, the RFC said, report-
edly with an oral understanding that
be would return to the production
end of the project if the first plane
proved successful
The finished plane is expected to
attain a Traveling range of 3.500 miles
carrying a full load of 65 tons. The
cruising speed Is given as 175 miles
an houf. with top speed probably of
2X8 miles an hour. A take-off run of
5,500 feet will be required to get it
into the atr.
Spokesmen for Howard Hughes de-
fend he project on the ground in the
event df another war it can carry up
ta 750 troops on short hauls or 350
PIRMANINT
..di kow/
r a
NEW YORK. June 4 —Edward
R. Stettinius Jr. left unanswered Tues-
day the question of whether heewill
carry on as U. S. delegafc to the
United Nations Security council pend-
ing the peace agency’s scheduled de-
bate on Franco Spain Thursday.
Arriving here from Washington
Monday evening a few hours after his
resignation had been accepted by
President Truman. Stettinius said the
question of whether he would attend
the Thursday meeting and how long
it would take him to wind up his UN
assignment were matters he still has
to work out.
In the meantime. President Truman
Tuesday faced the exacting task of
finding a new representative to United
Nations.
If the president and Secretary of
State Byrnes had any successor to
Stettinius in mind Monday night,
some of their top aides did hot know
it. In fact, there were indications the
two men had not even started sur-
veying possible candidates.
On of these was a premature an-
nouncement by Byrnes through- a
press officer that Stettinius would
continue for the time being. The state
department later corrected itself, say-
^mg the resignation would take effect
ihwnediately.
Herschel Johnson, a career diplomat
who has served as deputy to Stet-
tinius. will fill the UN seat tempo-
rarily.
Much of the speculation about a
successor centered about John G.
Winant. former Republican governor
of New Hampshire, who recently com-
pleted a six-year assignment as am-
bassador to Britain. Others mentioned
are Undersecretary of State Dean
Acheson and Joseph E. Davies, former
ambassador to Russia and Belgium.
Townsmen, Farmers
Urge Firm Federal
Curbs on Strikers
tended to call normal wastage is !
drawing away 20 to 30 {percent of all 1
the foods our farmer* produce." adds
Robert T. Oliver of Syracuse univer-
city. "Twenty-five acres of every 100
acres farmed are plowed, planted, cul-
tivated and harvested with the pro-
duce to be discarded finally as waste."
Lom Through Garbage
An analytical study of garbage col-
lected in 247 cities showed that the
garbage contained an average of 300
pounds of food per person per year.
One grocery firm estimated that shop-
pers handling food in stores destroy
8** million pounds of green vegetables
a year.
*Part of the waste on farms, says
Clark and other experts, is due to
rodents and wild animals, but man-
made factors such as labor maldis-
tribution during harvesting, mechan-
ized methods which make complete
efficiency impractical, improper pack-
ing. inadequate refrigeration and lack
of rapid transit occur along the dis-
tribution line.
"As a country becomes
Clark says, in tracing the increase of I
Dwarfing all other craft, the mam-
moth IJo-fnet wooden hull and 320-
foot wing win be trucked separately
over 28 miles of highway from Culver
City to the Loa Angele* Waterfront
wrberw it will be reassembled RFC
officiate describe the moving aa the
greatest undertaking in the history of
plans tnnimw -
Obstruction* to Be Removed
Telephone and power lines, build-
ings art other obstructions will be
ripped down along the highway tb
make way for the plane's huge bulk.
Traffic jrrjbsbly will be rerouted for
the dura- on of the moving, which
may take weeks, according to offi-
cials
To crgdle the huge wint. which is
COOK'S
GLASS CLEANER
Just spray it on ond
wipe it off. Leoves win-
dows cleor ond bright.
•-0Z. BOTTLE QC0
WITH SPRAYER
COOK'S
MIHTS
WABinNOTON — (NANA) - The
recoaatructioo finance corporation I
will spend an additional 81,500.000 to,
tear (Sown and reaaarmble the giant
Hughes Hercule* wooden flying boat
for in Loa Angeles harbor, it has
been announced
The giant seaplane, largest air cargo
boat in the world has been under
construction since 1942 at the Howard
MNgbeS aircraft plant in Culver City,
Cahf.. *pd is expected to be finished
the latter part of thia year.
Bug-a-boo
MOTH CRYSTALS
These pine-
scented Moth
Crystals put an
end to the de-
structive moth
worm and give
excellent pro-
teqtion to
clothes, drapes
and rugs.
Noble County's
Cited Best Way
To Ease Famine
I field. * dock probably twice its size
'__1 o« bpllt The wing
tnoun-ed tn the harbor on
aasemtiWd i hull Eight I
weasuriar 17 feet in diameter will be
Installed on the eight huge Pratt
tnent will pay Howard Hughes the i
moving cost*, "not to exceed 8500 -
M0.** M*d cost of "flight testing not
to exceed 81 million" on the under-
' _____ i are to be con-
dueted satisfactorily to the RFC.
Total of S2S Million
With 818 million already Mwnt by
,,,, a. ■ 1
81A00 00O commitment will bring the
we * intal InVactrYlpnf in
ths ~iour-ye*jr-olc1 project to S20 mil-
Uon 'uhe 818 million appropriation
was expended largely for building fa-
cflfctos »t Culver City and in pur-
I CtMStaR and testing various plywoods
for the giant plane.
t The project is under heavy criti-
cism from some civilian aeronautic*
a/tmtedairatirm officials who< express
doubt the all-wood plane will stand
up under the stress of the planned
65-tor. df>rgo on long haula. Officials
who conducted test* say the plane has
been apprmed in an engineering way
son told me. "I’m building them un-
der contract and Im stalled on
every one; can't finish ’em. Under
OPA prices the manufacturers just
hold the lumber. I can't buy it ex-
cept at black marketa."
But Donaldson was one of those
who said he though OPA should be
continued.
OPA Should Hear This
"Paul Porter ought to be here to
hear some of this,” Leatherock
who has for years known the pres-
and once
LOS ANGELES—Willa Holt Wake-
field Foerster. 76, one of the New
York s favorite entertainers and sing-
ers near the turn of the century and
• a former wife of the late sculptor Ai-
wa SHIN GTON. June 4—(/P)—The
pre-harvest wheat shortage will force
the nation's milling industry to bump
along at only partial capacity all dur-
ing June.
This situation prevails despite a
government offer to lend mills wheat
from foreign relief stocks until the
new crop becomes available in July.
The loan decision , was announced
even as senators hetfrd advice from
the Millers National federation Mon-
day that 98 jiercent of all flour mills
in the country would be forced to
close by Tuesday night,
•any prolonged shut-
agriculture department
make wheat available
both to relieve domestic bread short-
and io produce liour for export,
officials said the total quantity |
firm has achieved a 70 jiercent reduc- . of grain
two visitors also were newspaper-
Farmer* Already 'Drafted
"Since that Saturday speech" was
a phrase that was repeated as the
talk went around the table The
speech was Mr. Truman's when he
asked congress for emergency labor
legislation including the right to
draft workers who struck against
the government.
"I'm for it. draft and all. Gang
said. "The farmers already are
drafted We can't strike.”
With not much qualification, that
waa the way they felt and spoke.
Leatherock said Noble county had
been complaining that Mr. Truman
lacked courage. He said they are
changing their tune since that Sat-
urday talk But Mr. Truman has not^
yet won them. Like most northern
Oklahoma counties, the', farmers
here are Republicans, the town folk
Democrats. The late FDR carried
Perry by something under 300 votes
in 1944 and lost the farm districts
by a bit more.
Strike Bills Watched
Republicans and Democrats alike,
this typical farm area is waiting to_
see how the strike dispute comes
out. They want to know whether
congress will pass the legislation Mr.
Truman asked for and whether he
will veto the labor-control legis-
lation congress has just passed.
If some anti-srtike legislation that
works goes on the books. Mr. Tru-
man will expand to almost heroic ;
size hereabout*. If it happens the
other way Noble county isn't going
to like it. or like the president. Bit-
terness about strikes is real and
deep seated. After that it is OPA.
although my luncheon companions
divided exactly evenly on the ques-
tion should OPA be abandoned en-
tireiy-
Hall, the banker, Singletary, the
lawyer. Gang, the wheat farmer.
Donaldson, the lumber merchant,
and Paden, of the chamber of com-
merce, all said keep it. But they
said for the love of heaven do some-
thing to Impove R* administration.
Lumber Woe* Heard
Donaldson pretty nearly can
make you cry whe^. he tella about
the lumber business. Donaldson Is
just back from California where he
bought lumber and it coat him a lot.
Before that he had been to Ar-
kansas but price* were too high for
him.
Donaldson said there was plenty
of .lumber but that it was being
held for higher prices If the OPA
is destroyed or ceilings are hiked.
He, personally, thinks that is pretty
bad not only for him but for every-
oneu ,
"I'm building seven houses which
are to be occupied by OIs." Donald -
HAIR GRAYING?
Friends Will Never Know
MAYOR'S wond«rful h*ir dy« U your answer.
8>cc«Mfullr used by thousand* Quickly, esslly
spoiled Comes reedy to use. No skin test
J'.'.'.'.im:) SAFE Contains part eentle
____J Bea ttlfully recnlors. »»
tn youth. Lea>e< hair lustrously soft WtU
not wash out ■ or fade, permit* eurlina »«’’■
tn» Must plea** or your money refunded
Dru«*l»t. or »1 3k postpaid in plain sealed
wrapper MAYOR CO P. O Boa *014. Dept ,
107, Kansas City « Mo
"Bervlns America for over 7S years "
(Adv ).
*'A ■
t.
Handling Losses
For example, he says, in machine
harvesting of grain the equipment
doesn't reach grain standing in field |
cornera because Lhe overall harvesting
process would be greatly slowed there- |
i which the government will :
tlon In fresh fruit and vegetable spoil- be able to lend will be far from suf-
age since 1922 through elimination of ficient to keep all mills at full capa-
transportation handicaps. city until the new crop is available.
atoadUM that both
Siurtad asttsfoetorilv
tbs RFC oh the plane, the additional
V. 8. taxpayers' total investment in
IT _ _ * ___________ ♦ e ’> < i
818 million appropriation
By LYLE C. WILSON
Ytfnifert Pres* WBKhinffton Mana*eri
PERRY, June 4.— <UP)—Sitting
around the cracker barrel here puts
you at the oblong table beyond the
lunch counter in Wesley Marcy's
Gem cafe, south side of the square.
Perry, Okla.; population about 6,-
I 500
You talk but you don't eat crack-
ers. You eat steaks In between
bltea of succulent beef and French
fried potatoes somebody says some-
body ought to give those strikers
hell. If President Truman can and
will do ft. that will be strictly all
I right with the 10 gentlemen seated
| at Wes Marcy's oblong table
Truman Action Awaited
If Mr. Truman does that some of
the Republican farmers around here
might even consider voting Demo-
cratic next time. If Mr. Truman
fails the farm country probably will
make the Republican tally soar.
The 10 men were eight from town
I and two from the country. They and
| two guests chomped 12 of the finest
steaks in northern Oklahoma Then
we had a couple of hours of cracker-
barrel conversation about the state
of the nation There was a pause
in the first minute of talk when W.
K Leatherock. publisher of the Daily
Journal, bawled for Wes Marcy to
appear from his kitchen.
* Damn it. Wes," complained
Leatherock. "these aren't fork
for steaks Im going to have to
use a knife to cut mine Fork steaks
are what we ordered Shouldn't
have any visitors here and give 'em
a steak they can't cut with a fork."
Cases Fall of Meat
L. G. Williams, across the table,
laughed that wisecrack away. The
steaks came from Williams' M and
W food store, a spacious enterprise
Where the chilled cases were full of
cured meats and beef. Leatherock.
Williams and the other local men
were as good a cross section of mid-
western rural opinion aa could be
gathered anywhere in the country.
O. R. Hall, burly and quiet spoken,
it president of the Exchange bank.
Dapper Al T. Singletary is a lawyer.
Ira B. Gang, with a complexion of
tanned leather, ha* 800. maybe 10.-
000, acre* of wheat land nearby. R.
J. Keller, a war veteran, owns "The
Famous." a department store;
Charles V Arsdell. tall and burned
red by sun and wind, raises Here-
ford cattle and some wheat. Clar-
ence Padrn. secretary of the cham-
ber of commerce. Hurry Donaldson,
owner of the only independent lum-
ber yard in town, and Milo Watson,
partner in ''
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 57, No. 109, Ed. 2 Tuesday, June 4, 1946, newspaper, June 4, 1946; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1765542/m1/4/: accessed April 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.