Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 63, No. 191, Ed. 2 Wednesday, September 17, 1952 Page: 4 of 4
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BIBLE VERSE: Unto you it is given in the behalf
suffer for Hie take,—Philippine 1:29
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Grin and Bear It
Unseen Audience
Alien to Children
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The Smoking Room
By R. G. M.
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By DAVID LAWRINCt
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country declaring that the "mess in Washington" has to be cleaned
fight between the two Republican factions in the Chicago convention,.
N )
Ears Lure Mate
of agricultural policy,
f
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3,208
1,810
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4 00 EARs soMeres
137.2
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no means confined to the Democrats.
be bringing him around to my
'who is this fel-
75.2
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A new rumor has it that Stalin
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Republican nomination.
H
riage.
special Bill of Rights .
the nominee is largely one of
The Neighbors
Constitution.
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They’ll Do It Every Time
a
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law.
ARETE
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WHO
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WouL
UPAPRIZE
YEAH~ONE
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"Why must we watch
choaniidatetT Tht old comedians Md
beuer-gegtriters."------------------
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opposed to sending any more
troops abroad. So that seems to
state might do the Democratic ticket more harm than good. the same.. ..
I
Hearing Draws More
Than Just Soundwaves
cm A SeWWeG
AACHwE
mutual security program?
"Sen. Taft: Yes, I have al-
ways said I would favor arm-
ing the troops in Europe and I
notice that since he came back
Are
. Our
may be encountered in these uncertain times long after a
major project has reached the construction stage.
reaching the other great group
of voters in this country ... I
don't know what his views are
on the subject.
0-00 YOU AGRIK with him
you is on foreign policy and particularly the mutual security pro-
gram. What would you say—or how would you say—how far apart
you are?
"Sen. Taft: On domestic policy. It seems to me he’s right. I
think General Eisenhower, since he's come back, on most of these
tough questions has gradually come around almost to the position
ID SEE ON
AND ABEL 1
X B0K L
confidence.
3. Do children havt to learn
to see?.
To the lesser lights in the administration will fall the
task of discussing for Oklahomans the issues of this cam-
paign- Neither the president nor his hand-picked candidate
has any present intention of putting in an appearance.
It is not altogether dear whether this reflects confi-
dence in the way Oklahoma is going to vote or a lack of
confidence in the reception that would await either the
president or his chosen heir.
Standing on Promises
sued in his statement after his ---------------------
talk last week with Gen. Eisen- cal person of the opposite
my knee.
Someone will have to tell him
that all Americans are cut-throats,
else he never would know it
THERE is absolutely no differ-
- ence in their feelings. They
love mama best of all, and papa
next best, even if mama and papa
are Russians who hate this country,
or Chinese who tell them that Am-
ericans are cruel, ruthless, cold-
eyed murderers.
This column was prompted by
an evening in the zocolo here. The
Mexican boys and girls were exact-
ly like the boys and girls at home.
Played the same games. The big-
ger boy held the hand of his smal-
ler brother, the 10-year-old girl held
her little brother’s hand.
• A MANTAKIGA RADO
TO TRe REPIR SHOP PassES
TREETV ADDICrS
MHCT TMe CHOICt On
amatc? _ ,
poiz
EMMIWN
Sl\‘~
that nearly all of us are nearly aU
alike.
To me it is a shame that the
world has reached a point where
suspicion is more common than
any weed you can name.
And the failure rests with us
adults. It is our fault. Completely.
I would bet the last penny I have
Wade Witticisms
Actually, the candidate might be
smart to pull his punches slightly.
Thus, if he misses he won’t belt
himself in the back of the neck.
A bus strike in the east ran on
for almost three months, but with
no crack from local columnists
about "these are the times that
try men’s soles."
exnressed belief that inflation represents a greater threat ence with Sen. Taft on television was transcribed in part as follows:
expressed oener -na -nauon represents a greater -nrem "Q—Senator, following General Eisenhower from Abilene to De-
to the nation than Russian aggression. troit, it seems to me that he plainly believes his chief difference with
hower. But the people on the Some tone-deaf persons are egotis-
Democratic side who want to "herk « j "
Sen, Soaper Say9:
The BBC won't let you tell jokes
about fats Farouk. If you must
ridicule someone, let it be your
mother-in-law, who as often as not
is a sweet old thing.
A dirty trick on the candidate,
two years hence, would be to play
back his campaign pledges, just to
Take a Look at Hefner’s Shoreline
IITILTED long ago in summer heat and prolonged drouth
’ ’ were the spirits of most Oklahoma City residents, along
with their lawns and flower gardens.
But the continuing absence of rainfall in any appreci-
able quantities has done more than this. It has brought
NOT SURPRISING,
didn't ask him to relinquish.
As a matter of fact, Gov.
Stevenson said on Monday, when
asked about endorsing Sen.
Byrd, Democrat, of Virginia,
that he respected the Virginia
senator's views, and he too, had
his own principles. Sen. Wayne
Morse of Oregon, Republican,
declares he is going to stick to
his own principles and gives the
impression that the general ia
in disagreement with his views,
especially on the Taft-Hartley
I. Vim
. Stuart
peal or retention of the present
law but the kind of provisions
which shall go into a new law.
Gov. Stevenson agrees with the
labor union bosses, who want a
return to the one-sided Wagner
act, while Gen. Eisenhower
wants a two sided liw, fair
labor and management
(Note: a gram is .035 ounces;
kilogram 2.20 pounds)
GOOD BREAD: Something Eu-
ropeans claim is rarely seen in the
United States any more, good
home-made soups—ditto, and lots
of potatoes and cabbage help to
keep the European system going
when the expensive protein foods
are not available.
RUT the average diet is a far
• cry from the fancy groceries
one can see some of our allies
taking aboard in the better res-
taurants of Paris, Brussels, Roma
and points north.
The fact does seem to be that
there isn’t too much to spare.
STEEL PRODUCTION: Europe’s
ability to produce armaments ia
greatly limited by its steel pro-
duction.
American steel production aver-
ages about 8 million tons a month.
The western European average in
1951 was 4.7 million tons, of which
the NATO countries only produced
3.6 million tons. Of this amount
1.3 million was produced in the
United Kingdom, leaving continen-
tal members of NATO with a
mere 2.3 million tons.
ANOTHER important factor is
2 that the countries of continen-
tal Europe, and Britain, have to
export much of their steel, in
finished form, to pay for essen-
tial raw materials.
Terms of trade: A steady and
sensational rise in the cost of
essential imports have raised cain
with the economies of free Eur-
ope since World war II.
The Marshall plan countries to-
day have to export 60 percent
more than they did before the
war to non-European areas to pay
for slightly less in essential im-
ports.
The United States is cushioned
against such developments, first,
because it sells raw materials aa
well as manufactured goods, and
secondly because foreign trade is
not so important in relation to
its economy as a whole.
The situation can be summed up
in one sentence:
The European allies of the United
tinue indefinitely to he, in the red.
- WAWT SUMO
oFA mACNe
DA SUPPosE
TAT Is?
By HENRY M'LEMORE
pUEBLA, Mexico—There is such
I a thing as one world, but
grown-ups can only live on the
fringe of it
The real one world belongs to
children.
Once a boy or a girl grows up
he or she leaves behind the sweet-
ness and kindness and understand-
ing that the Lord meant for men
and women to have and enjoy.
I am not at all sure that children
would choose to abandon global
graciousness. But in the world in
which we live today it ia strictly
a survival of the fittest.
Show one bit of weakness, lean
a little toward understanding, and
the nicest thing that will be said
about you is that you are weak.
Children are children the world
over.
tween Sen. Taft and General Eisenhower. Now that it hasn't hap-
pened, there is a great fuss about how the general has "surrendered”
to the senator. That's the natural political maneuver of the hour,
but it doesn’t conceal the fact that the Illinois governor is disap-
pointed—he would have preferred dissension as between the gen-
eral and the Ohio senator.
omy, reports that the pay roll for civilian employes in the
' executive branch of the government for the fiscal year re-
cently ended totaled $9,541,000,000-an increase of 24 per-
cent over the year before. It’s the normal, defiant Truman
way of fulfilling promisee of economy.
EOS'K
Regardless of short-term fluctuations inflation will con-
tinue in the long run if government persits in spending
more than it gets in taxes and covers the resulting deficits 00 eneed or con inuin *
with bonds stuffed into the banking system.
AMLLIUISRAGE
_____________ Hatred, Suspicion , e
Calories per
person per day
Animal protein,
grams per person,
per day
Fats, grams per
person per day
Meat, kilograms
per person per
annum
Eggs, kilograms
per person per
annum
Cane and beet
sugar, kilograms
per person per day
Liquid milk,
kilograms per
person per annum
Wemn.RESRB
"HECBHR-PULL
c TAATO
cmuzparR.,
• !
। there never was any substantial difference on issues between the
two aspirants for the presidential nomination. On June 19 last,
nearly a month before the general was nominated, a press confer-
'THE Smoking Room editor spent from mid-afternoon until nearly
A bedtime at the Pontotoc county fair in Ada looking for good
times and signs of hard times. Being in the fair deal’s disaster zone,
we figured folks down there would be limping, lean-looking and low
in spirits. Instead, we found the men alert and strong-shouldered,
the women beautiful and happy, all merchandising and service doors
wide open and no wolves lurking around. Usually, we do not look in
on county fairs because there are 70 such fairs in the state and if
we cover one all the others point daggers in our direction for not
covering theirs, too. But we got a free ride to Ada and, besides, this
show was bflled as a southeastern Oklahoma industrial exposition
and we wanted to see what gadgets that section is manufacturing.
We went down with Bill Cain, Hugh Harrell, Ferdie Deering, Jim
Robberson, Ross Taylor, Shell Stirling and some others from here
who carry weight
which I have occupied and real-
ly established for the Republican
party in the past. He says he's
in favor of the statement of prin-
ciples which I largely wrote in
1950. There are two differences
there, however. In the labor
field I cannot tell from his re-
marks whether he is against the
Taft-Hartley law or not. In the
IT 1$
---**-4-97*
‘HAT inflation is having a growing impact on the national
- consciousness is apparent in a sampling of opinion taken
recently by Facts Forum of Dallas.
Three-fourths of the voters participating in its survey
-■ I 096
“This woman it suing for $100,000 because of a broken
jaw in that auto accident . . . she claims total disability at
a wife. . . .”
I
The KATS Dallas, allanta.
Itornotgotherwine credited 1 paper and also ihe local hews published herein,
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1952
VV:a
promote fricttion in the Repub- for music and violently insist on
lican party conveniently have imposing their singing on others,
forgotten that there wasn't any Little doubt this lessens their at-
great difference on issues be- tractiveness to musical persons,
fore the convention between the Sometimes tone-deaf persons can
The people who were quick to recognize the danger of
inflation, however, showed a remarkable lack of under-
standing of its causes. High-level consumer income was cited
as a cause of inflation by 46 percent of those participating
in the poll.
LIGH wages like high prices usually accompany inflation,
-1 but they are symptoms rather than causes. The real
cause and the only cause of inflation is the expansion of
credit by government through an infusion of its IOU’s into
the commercial banking system.
* * *
Ada's town and country boosters have a system we like very
much. Once a month they organize a group of business people
and aet up a picnic supper with good entertainment at some
form home—and invite all of the newcomers in the areas a*
well as elder residents. They make now formers feel et home
quickly. Harvey Lambert is head of this movement and he gets
lots of help. They don't wait for the newcomers to come to Ada
—the town tokos itself to them and leaves them a welcoming
plaque signed by all.
0 0 0
There are 40 herds of registered beef and dairy animals within
40 minutes of Ada, and now they're moving toward the frying-size
chicken business in a big way. The program led by W. E. Harvey
a year back, placing registered dairy heifers with 4-H and FFA
boys in the county, now is paying off handsomely in more and better
dairying in the area.
Yessum, they're still trying to catch some of the trout that were
placed in Byrd Mill creek 24 years ago, but most of Ada's fishermen
drive to Texoma lake, only one hour south, where fishing is nearly
always good.
Here Is Why We
Still Help Europe .
By WILLIAM B. STONEMAN
(Chicaso Daily News Foretm Service)
PARIS — Recent American visi-
- tors to Europe have reported
—correctly—that the shops of west*
era Europe are full of food, clothes,
and other essential items of cive
ilized existence.
These reports have caused Amer-
icans in general to wonder why--
if things are so good over here—
the governments of western Europe
can’t spend more on their own de-
fense instead of "making Uncle
Sam pick up the check.”
Western Europe’s answer is that
it is "just barely over the hump”
—with not much more than its
people need for decent existence.
. They can produce statistics to
show that in comparison with the
United States the countries of West-
ern Europe are poor country cous-
sins, scarcely able to afford the
necessities of life. Due to the ratio
between their population and their
natural resources they are likely
to remain that way, they add.
AS a rule, they point out, their
4 people lack luxuries which are
commonplace in the United States.
Instead of automobiles they are
lucky to have bicycles. Where
Americans would have automatic
refrigerators they have ordinary
iceboxes or just a kitchen shelf.
Where an American has a tele-
vision set or a fancy radio, a Euro-
pean has a modest radio set.
This may not go for Paris, or
Brussels, or Copenhagen—the kind
of places which most Americans
see. But it is the rule for western
Europe as a whole.
Although Europeans concentrate
on the essentials of life—food,
clothing, housing and heat—statis-
tics show they also have less of the
basic things than Americans.
They benefit by good manage-
ment and careful housekeeping
and often live comfortably, while
Americans live hectically, but they
lack the excess of well-being that
allows heavy expenditure on no-
essentials.
ttERE are a few statistics pro-
-- duced by officials who believe
that Americans exaggerate the
ability of present-day western Eu-
rope to increase its defense expen-
diture:
AVERAGE INCOME: The aver-
age American is three times as
well-to-do as the average citizen
of non-com munist Europe.
The average per capita income
of the United States in 1950 was
$1,884 a year. The average for all
European countries which shared
in the Marshall plan was $586.
Figures for some of our Euro-
pean allies were: United Kingdom
$919, Netherlands $589, Norway
$744, France $754, Italy, about $300,
Denmark $864.
FOOD CONSUMPTION: The av-
erage American is not only three
times as rich as the average free
European. He eats nearly twice as
much meat, more than twice as
many eggs, about half again as
much sugar and a third again as
much fats.
INDIVIDUAL FOOD consump-
- tion 1951-52—(N o t e: OEEC
stands for Organization for Euro-
pean Economics Co-operation,
formed of nations aided by U. S )
OEEC
U.S.A, countries
in the industrial show in the Ada armory we expected to
see exhibits of all of the town's leading factories. We know
darned well that Ada plants manufacture and process portland
cement, glass products, meat products, brick and heavy duty
pumping equipment—but those were net represented. Next time
we hope they join with the others in shewing off the industrial
side of Pontotoc county's up-and-coming metropolis.
♦ * *
However, the industrial show was well worth while. Russell
Branan was showing some of his summer and winter heating and
cooling machines. The Ada mills had plenty of flour and feed on
display. The Thomas concrete pipe people had pipe almost big
enough to drive a truck through, plus some nifty blocks for many
purposes. The Ada Iron and Metal company was showing some of
its modern-type cattle guards, grills and swings. Ed Canterbury was
there with a few walls and tables full of handmade flyfishing flies,
tied mainly by women, and they also do quilting and make fancy
lettered shirts. Maybe you didn’t know Ada had all that industry.
Well, it has, and it is on the way toward obtaining more.
* ♦ ♦
An unusual exhibit, carrying a walloping thought in behalf
of traffic safety, was a bate of scrap iron. It was made up af
jumbled bits of metal, the remains of a good automobile after
a wreck, and there was a sign on it: "Drive carefully.** It further
carried the point that if you don't care to have your car baled
up like that, you'd bettor keep both hands on the wheel, stay
awake and sober and watch out for oncoming vehicles.
V e • o
Exhibits in the county fair’s display halls indicated that Pontotoc
county has enjoyed bumper crops this year. You seldom see finer
corn, spuds, cotton, peanuts and grain than the samples on display.
Cy Hailey, the county agent, said this was his 30th county fair in
the state, and this one was the best of all. The same kind of enthusi-
asm was voiced by Martha Mote, the county’s home demonstration
agent who knows the rural women, bless ’em, by their first names.
Some of the bronze broadbreasted turkeys weighed nearly 40 pounds,
the size we were used to long, long ago. The beef and dairy livestock
show was made up of animals that looked as though they were
from $10,000 to $30,000 sires. The 4-H and FFA displays were good
enough to enter in any state fair. Yessum, Pontotoc county has done
all right on the farm this year.
* « *
The fellow who guided us around the fair in Ada was Emil
Wyatt, local head of the OG&E, who knows no more about kafir,
peanuts, milk pails, cruppers and hame strings than we do, but
there is ne more ardent worker for bigger end better fairs than
he it. He is president of the Ada chamber of commerce end led
the way to setting up e dandy steak dinner for the visitor* from
the big city. Wyatt else is one of Oklahoma’s better fishermen
and boat peddlers, too, and he makes excellent selections of
feminine helper* in hit office.
* * *
The way the Ada business and professional men back up and
help put on the county fair shows why Ada is a good and growing
town. About 300 men and some women in the town go all-out for it.
Rotary and Kiwanis operate all concessions. Lions take care of the
Chagrin in Both Camps
TISAPPOINTMENT over the president’s decision not to' madntizczarbsrdementthinkhbs
• visit Oklahoma in his political tour of the nation ia by
Not a few Republicans may be disappointed also in view position on that question. Also
of their feeling that an appearance of the president in this his policy of dealing with the
INDIA doesn’t like America. In-
- dia will like us less when the
adults finish with the children. The
same goes for Egypt, Iran, Syria,
and almost all the other countries
you can name.
There must be something wrong
with what we tell the world, or
what we give the world.
I am not one to go around saying
our secretary of state ia a com-
munist, or that he isn’t doing his
very best. But I do believe that it
is his job to sell this country to
the world.
I do not think he has done his
job. Even with billions to give
away. What sort of a job would
he have done had he* had nothing
to give?
Excuse me. I don’t like to think
of that
mSA frnenensen
= :
•Fe~ -L- ----
F
IT REMAINS TO be seen what
the general's speech to the
American Federation of Labor
convention will reveal as to the
details of bis proposals on la-
bor legislation. For it is an
oversimplification to report, as so
many news dispatches have
been doing, that the governor
favors "repeal” while the gen-
eral favors "amendment” of th*
Taft-Hartley act.
The truth is the law was re-
written by the senate in 1949
and the result was the Taft-Ive*
bill, which passed the senate
but failed by a close vote to
pass the house due to the un-
willingness of the labor lobby
to let the measure become law
to replace the Taft-Hartley act.
They thought it made too good
an issue to give up and had
better be retained for the 1952
campaign.
The Taft-Ives bill is a sen-
sible revision of the Taft-Hart-
ley act and one that labor and
management can accept provi-
ded neither wants a one-sided
Brae is im liliger re- 1
........ A
one-way view—the insider can sae amn pledge that there . . . Will be
out but the outsider can't a** in' no dissolution . . . God bless our
Thus the most timid, modest lady land and help us to .,. Fulfill our
can wear gossamer clothes with "
rii
. __________________ They played hide-and-seek. They
Uinly with the years. In view of the time required for pre- WASHINGTON—Gov. Stevenson seems to have discovered rolled hoops. They licked ice cream
liminary planning and getting the approval of the people it: that General Eisenhower is a Republican and, as such, favor* the cones. They cried when they fell
would geem this in a matter of urgeney already ousting of the Democratic party from power in Washington. down, and their mothers kissed the
would seem this is a matter or urgency area,ny. The same discovery has been made by many people, besides bruises to make them well.
Experience with the Oklahoma ( ity-nulsa turnpike Gov. Stevenson, who were sure that Eisenhower was just a Tru-
shows, moreover, how many costly delays and frustrations man "stooge." They observe the general going up and down the T EEAL-. believe that the best
----t- that ha "mne- U’ackinaten" i.„ •. i--1----j * part of travel is the discovery
hear him ask,
By ALBERT EDWARD WIGGAM low?"
As long as the government's expenditures are exceeding
revenues it must run deficits which it covers by issuing field
bonds. Those bonds not sold to the public are thrust into the
banking system, and credit is expanded to that extent.
t. Will people soon be wear- rungs along the ladder to
ing clothes made from oil and great and noble height* . . . And
gaSf at the very top of it... In words
___.. .. that do not ramble . . . There is
degree. He has convictions and 9 Yes. Dr Gustav Egloss prophe- th* staunchest rung of all ... The
principles which the general i - sies that such clothes will soon glorious Preamble ... Th* per-
‘ ■ - be worn by billions. Petroleum fur feet Union, justice true . . . Aad
coats may outdo mink, both in to hom* tranquility . . . With wel-
rial life and politic*. Diaphanous far*, freedom and defens* . . .
tropical clothes can be made for a For our posterity . .. It is a sol-
OW Trumanism operates to clean up on* part of its own to find Sen. Taft and the gen-
• Washington mess is perhaps best shown by the record rrt wd SwwTtl^^^
in dollars and cents. Sen. Byrd, watchdog for federal econ- eign policy the difference be-
tween his views and those of
( us WHo DONATE, JUST ‛)."TE COMWITTEE LOCKS HAT CASE ?
\ CLEAR OFF THEIR. SHELVEsL.-- ARE TEYAFRAD LAST YEARS
(OF THE STUFF THEY Jx NWINNERS WiLL PUT THEIR
-UCANT SELL/ SPRIZES BACK ? as
G-4r. YEAH-ONE >
VPQnsEV. LOOK AT A PRIZE,
DoN-KG8\ L AND you CA TELL ,
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By JAMES J. METCALFE
Constitution Day
-------------------- ---— Today is Constitution Dsy . ..
two leading contenders for the be taught to perform fairly well on A time for celebration ... Be-
the piano, but not on the violin or cause the Constitution is . . . The
any instrumentthey have to tune, backbone of our nation . . . Its art-
Like attracts Uke in love snd mar- icles, amendments and ... Ite
sharply into focus the fact that existing water supplies
barely provide a margin of safety for the city at its present
stage of development to say nothing of its future needs.
It is difficult to watch the growing area of exposed
shoreline at Lake Hefner and maintain any degree of com-
placency regarding the adequacy of present water supplies.
A month ago it was estimated the city had drawn its
reserve down to a supply sufficient to support present needs
only for a year and a half. That estimate was based, how-
ever, on usual rates of consumption, and demands on the
reserve have been far above normal during this summer’s
period of sustained drouth. Light rainfall during th* winter
and another drouth next summer conceivably could result in
a critical situation. AAD IT ( ’ n ■
Th.s.....prohlem confronting the city without regard LOE Unity Grieves Democrats
I for the population growth that will come almost cer-
. . . , .that I could make a Russian baby
Th* record, on the other hand, shows that, except for the bitter ’laugh, simply by chucking him un-
der the chin, or bouncing him on
? Yes. On* child in four in the
• first grad* and over half in
the eighth grad* have defective vi-
sion. This is often because a child
has not learned to see properly at
the time he enters school and study
makes it worse. Until recently the
only remedy was spectacles, but
now eye exercise — given by eye
specialists—often cures th* diffi-
culty.
*} }
up—he is no friend of the Truman regime and has denounced its
record.
When a critical need exist, in this period of inflation it , All this, is disappointing J0,?* followers and supporters of
,, 1 Stevenson who had hoped that they could develop a real rift be-
l. best met quickly. Delayed too long it easily could appear
Impossible of fulfillment.
A Problem Misunderstood
present Korean “ar seems to be Yes, it "ears" include the _____________
The foregoing is in substance I tire hearing apparatus. A spends most of his .time in the carnival shows. The BP1W group helps to peddle tickets, entertain
the information the senator is- "tone-deaf" person is not as likely Crimea for his health. Evidently and fill all jobs not already filled. Boy Scouts direct parking in
as a music lover to attract a musi-the fellow never fully recovered several spacious lots, and do a good job of it. Fellows who head up
cal person of the opposite sex. from his last death, the various fair promotions, working late hours when necessary,
Some tone-deaf persons are egotis-* 1 include Bill Hoover, Dub Alston, Orville Spann, Bowie Ballard, Jo*
tically sure they have a "good ear" PnrtrJIltB Gifford, Ron Bailey, Robert Minton, Doug Hall, and ever so many
for music and violently insist on 1 UI LI UUU> others. Hack Huddleston, banker, is on the move for his community
as much as anybody, and Cull Boswell is always standing by waiting
a call; when a big job needs to be started, or finished off, Cull is th*
man they usually call to do it.
Butow* a»4 Pradnrttoa
—. . ..... Manaain«Taitor
________ Director of Advertimna
• • *
Oklahoma City Times
_______E K GAYLORD. Edltor
------------------------------ r™*** snd.puntia
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 63, No. 191, Ed. 2 Wednesday, September 17, 1952, newspaper, September 17, 1952; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1989592/m1/4/: accessed June 30, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.