Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 63, No. 303, Ed. 2 Thursday, January 25, 1951 Page: 4 of 4
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Stress on Women’s b« Pw*« About it
Grin and Bear It
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THURSDAY JANUARY 25, 1951
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The Smoking Room
By R. G. M.
H
women do. No suitor ever kicked off
but let a man
so, sees to it
Minds Weak?
(
ft
though.
at
be more than just a home
senat
wil
seen deer in that region for the last 11 years,
see
I
3
“Human Fertility. The Modern Di-
The Neighbors
Wade’s Witticisms
P2
WHAT GOES ON HERE?
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Would the United States some day,
pr,
"2 3
Almost always there is a way out.
BRISBANE — Auatralia’s
as in the case of the phonograph re-
Pikers
-25
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9
daily, followed by disease, famine, war,
chaos for vast masses of humanity.
This means, he maintains, “human
Jammed Institutes
Hint Body Stronger
BUT I TOUGHT We -
wHOLE career OF Te
m wAs D fish !
The committee also has created a
demand for more of the kind of work
feel
lets
me
it!
0
t
H
heart.
A
kins, "lack of inner mental
ence, inability to think stralgh
straight or will straight.” It
one person in every 100. Seems
even fewer people can think si
2. Will many draftees be
jected because of hunger?
motion in the UN been adopted without the passage of a con-
gressional resolution, there might have been di
up in
voice
ment.
being
A Chicagoan wrote the medical col-
umnist that he drank three highballs
at night while watching televiston and
it didn't make his arthritis wens. Did
it make the TV better?
I
15 cm
mao
A previous subpena, calling for May
to testify in Cleveland last Friday never
was served. Federal marshals in Chi-
cago were told at May's home, his
Chicago office, and at his country
club that May was somewhere in
California.
Sen. Kefauver (D., Tenn.), chair-
man of the committee, wants to ask
May under oath whether or not Eddie
Vogel, the Cook county slot machine
boss, had a 40 percent Interest in the
machines at the Tam o’ Shanter club.
E also calls attention to the proposed $100 millions bonus
to veterans. This measure, also, should be boosted by
of the wrong kinds of food. This dis-
covery lead to the enactment of the
national school lunch set, providing
children with a cheap noonday meal
at public expense.
3. is human intelligence go-
ing down or up?
, “Then, rd walk right into the Kremlin with a bomb under
each arm and Id sayHelen, you guys .. "
on an unbreakable disc.
They put up a bungalow on the
site after tearing down a tree tt took
50 years to build. Then they can it
an improved property
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49 /
that his shoes are shined, can't wait
to run clean around a car to open
itended, and send
even on such oc-
iy and Lincoln's
22
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L
Tisrenn6DTe
OFFICE CASH COP CO
HS STUFFIEST STJFF-
FOR TWo FIETY-NINE HE‘Q
WANT A PIECE OF SOUTH
ATLANTC- JL--
I
dear ... To make it up to you ... I
love you and adore you and ... I
want you to be mine . . . And only
in your image will . . . The sun for-
ever shine ... I treasure all your
whispers and... The letters that you
033
7
one Sweden ne AND sevemt
cnoNlES were oheANIZI6 A
FISMIN TIn TeY HAO
ARRANGeD Por SUPPLES AD
nm TWANISPoRTTON AND Fon
A CAMPINe sire. MOWTE
(PERSONNEL of Te PRTY ws
bewie comptered r—‘
apends several weeks debating
whether Soviet Ruasla to An ag-
grosser, hesitate to condemn ar-
gresslon? The British government
may well aak itself that question to-
day in fairness to the American
people.
94va,
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Nw
coc*eE
Pmcesse
Congress Puts UN on the Spot
By DAVID LAWRENCE
WASHINGTON—The congress of the United States, by a
unanimous vote of both houses, has taken the unprecedented
step of notifying the United Nations that Red China should be
declared an aggressor.
This carries with it the implication that the congress—which
alone possesses the war-making power under our constitution—
is ready to proclaim, if necessary, a naval blockade of Red China
and to apply economic penalties by shutting off all trade.
The entire world has been told now that the American gov-
ortraits
ERAGE
please get in touch with
•mk.CtmrNatieiemje.eeHiM. AD
UNSELFISN, BUT LACKS A
sense of PROPORTION. I MeA
TIs: JUST about TeTe me
DRINKS ARE FLOWN FRE€LY
and me POKEr enne IS UNDFR..
WY ANO ever/eoor IS semwe
DOWN FOR ANCETE,TRAT P
DARN FOOL WALL WANT W J
N-- 60 FISHING."----
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' c . e '•
niae
w be
the next time.
*•*
Editor Kayser in Chickasha mentions the possibility el
Grady county’s having an open deer season some day. He
saw a big doe on his farm south of Farwell. Others have
Oklahoma City Times
Kefauver and his chief oommittee
counsel, Rudolph Halley, have said
again and again over the months that
they could only touch the high spots
in their investigation of crime, and
that the real work had to be done oa
a community level
RUr they have discovered that they
D cannot even touch enough high
spots to satisfy local groups. In every
city visited by the committee, it has
been criticised for leaving work un-
4 -THE WATCHDO9 OR
’fWE Pi66YBANK-ID.
uKe TO ENTERTAIN MY
FOOT WHEN CHEAPO
STOOPS DOWN 10 PICK
[UPA PAPER cuP..,,
Beauty Is Tiring
By HENRY MLEMORE
T MAY be wrong, but to me it
* seems that the guys have it
better than the dolls. If it
weren’t for wear and tear on my
few suits I'd drop to my knees
every day and thank my lucky
stars that I wasn't born a chick.
AU one has to do to realize that we
guys have it easier than the dolls ts
to read the newspapers and magazines,
all of which have at least one column
or article devoted to what a woman
must do to retain or improve her
beauty.
Women, it appears, aren't supposed
ever to be homely or dowdy. /
A OB must not put wrinkles in their
al faces or fat around their middles.
Their hands must be as youthful in
appearance as when they skipped rope,
even if they are 50 and tearing to-
ward 51.
They must be willing to break their
necks to keep their necks from having
a sag.
If they are beautiful, women must
strive to be even more beautiful. If
they are just half pretty they must
undergo the tortures of the damned to
achieve real prettinesa. And if they
are homely they must go all out to
improve face, figure, and posture.
UXJHATS all this for? You guessed
W it. To appeal to men, most of
whom are born homely, grow homelier
with the passing of each minute, and
do practically nothing about it.
Can you imagine the average man
plucking his eyebrows in order to
cause a more rapid beating of some
babe’s heart. There are men who do
this sort of thing, I suppose, but they
are as scarce as a hoarse voice at a
hog calling contest.
Women believe—from reading the
women's pages, I suppose—that to
hold their husbands they should spend
twelve hours a day trying to look just
as they did when they walked down
the aisle and mama cried.
-
^ENTERTAINING A
SJ CUSTOMER IS TO
II SHOW HIM PICTURES
“52220
S ROOM-. —49
MEN accept marriage as a much
IVI more comfortable thing than
9— Yee. World war II records show
a that from 40 to 60 percent of _
lected men suffered from cronic hui
ger, which had induced other d< “
a
p
The Jap with his paper fans and
blossoms ceased to be quaint after
Pearl Harbor. And we sometimes won-
der about the smooth Chinese: Has
he, perhaps, a baser nature?
Selling 1951 car models at IMO
prices to a rollback of sorts—but if
it’s a matter of just picking a num-
ber, IMO was a nice year.
"A new Australian machine pro-
duces 80 pies a minute." For a strictly
senate.
] Ie hearings on the schedule to ad-
The bee keepers in Oklahoma are planning to reverse the duition to Neworleans include Detroit
order of paying for putting out bees on clover and alfalfa farms, the fir wook of February, at Louin
mittee can present a strong case
against the wire serviee in «• report
rAE hearings have never clearly
I proved that there is a direct tieup
between Continental Press Servies,
the keystone of the bookie wire busi-
neee. and the Capone mob. as frequent-
ly alleged, but the circumstantial evi-
dence may be enough to convince
congresa that racing news should be
banned from the interstate transmis-
Hon facilities.
While Continental Frose, owned by
the McBride family of Cleveland, In-
sista that tt to "Independent" and free
of mob control, ths committee han
TS
birthday.
But once the "I do” is finished
with he eases up. He says t himself,
I have waged a long and wearisome
campaign to gain my objective, and
like every combat warrior I deserve a
little rest—maybe 50 years of 11
pBr not a woman. She carries on
D just as if Jim or Joe or Frank
were a stranger to her, and must be
held at all costa—even such costly
costs as wilting under a dryer, starv-
ing on black coffee and dehydrated
[crackers, rubbing more oil into her
skin than Texas produces in a year,
and binding herself with outfits which
would have been considered cruel
even in medieval days.
It tires me just to think of what
women endure in the name of beauty
and love.
I think TH quit thinking of it
Senator Soaper Says:
It remains a question if Ike and his
composite army could stem a Russian
onslaught. At least, though, old Joe
would learn that west Europe la
loaded.
"Figure* show the Red Sox who
murder the ball at Fenway park, ar
mediocre on the road." And a flag
winner in the national pastime must
i1
sonallty for the worse. Many of the
Probers Issue New
Subpenas for May
By tow in A. lahey
(Ctotaw Daly Mewa Bevice)
WJASHINGTON-The senate
” crime committee will open
public hearings Thursday in
New Orleans. Once more it will
try to break through the iron
curtain of secrecy that shrouda
the operations of the Mafia or
“black hand" organisation.
The committee so far haa not been
too successful in exposing the Mafia.
It has tried in Kansas City, Chicago.
San Francisco and Tampa, Fla., where
gangsters of Sicilian origin are con-
centrated. Usually when a Sicilian wit-
ness is asked about the Mafia, he
turns pale and stutters that he knows
nothing about the organization or has
never heard of it
TESPITE the obvious fear at wit-
I nesses when asked about the secret
criminal band, which had ita origin
in Stelly in ths last century, the
committee investigators are convinced
that the Mafia is a going concern,
[active in the dope traffic, in extor-
tion and other forms of racketeering,
in murder and in the smuggling of
aliens.
New Orleans long has been regarded
as a Mafia stronghold.
The committee found in ita hear-
ings at Tampa a few weeks ago that
the supposed Mafia members in that
bomb—more than
HP
i
Clearly the future of ths UN As an
effective instrument of Internation-
al policy hangs In the balance.
America may have to develop for-
eign policies now without regard to
the collective action of the assembly
and may without regard to the col-
lective action of the assembly end
may consider a move to abandon
the plan whereby a majority of the
nations can take collective meas-
ures in defense of the charter.
Thus, the UN might have to be-
come merely a debating forum and
not a parliament of nations.
The United States, as the spon-
sor of the recent move to utilize
the assembly for the promulgation
of measures to resist aggression, can
with consistency urge that the
problem of aggression hereafter be
dealt with by regional agreements.
Thia would mean that recipro-
eat treaties or agreements could
bo made whereby other nations
would be aided by the United
Stale* only on condition that they
pledge themselves to furnish aid
to thia country when Ita Inter**!*
are Jeopardized through the ag-
gresslon of a third state.
The hesitation of Great Britain
and other member nations to vote
immediately for a resolution by the
UN to declare Red China an aggres-
sor has alienated many people here
who hitherto have been ready to ex-
cuse the dilatorinens of the Attlee
government.
such apologies are no longer
heard. For the Attlee government
has repeatedly shown itself much
more concerned about ita invest-
ments in Hong Kong than in the
continued support of the United
States.
In ths final analysis, it is pre-
dicted that the British will reluc-
tantly go along with American
policy. But the eoat already ha*
been considerable and Anglo-Ameri-
can relations have suffered an in-
jury which only a Churchill may
some day be able to heal.
Out of aN the resolutions voted
by congrems, what stands out la
th* senate resolutlon, also ndopted
unanimously, which would bar
Red China from admimalon to the
UN.
Thia alone ought to accentuate to
European countrles the lengths to
which American legislatora have
been provoked to go by Uto appease-
ment policies sponsored by the Att-
lee government, India and the Arab
ountries.
Plainly America la beginning to
discover that she haa fewer friends
among the nations of the world in a
showdown than the thought the had.
Would the United States some dav, commercial job, we have never un-
if Britain to attacked and the UN derstood why Um custard couldn't be
■ " printed.
dln ....
F* MN .
-t.
—
o«i»
parts are charging for new-used aura.
One dealer here, for example, quickly
sold for $8,750 each two new-used
Chevroleta, mm a Fleetline sedanette,
the other a Bel-Air coupe.
/ WATS this item, crudney?)
P“ENTTAINMENT- $ 2.59’ <
7 WHO DO You THINK VW ARE?
DIAMOND JIM? THIS IS A
Lvu
.p :
4-
8d
and the strength of your uppers.
**
This is to advise the Oklahoma City restaurants that
Madill and some other towns in the state put on a “dime eel-
fee day” a day or two ago. For one day only, they upped the
price of a cup of coffee to 19 eents, and gave the extra nickel
to the polio fund.
. ■
<7
i
iencea. Hunger always changes per-
fo,s«stmreoonent5 ]
pnis « soteo <mn oeuur l
MEOUT""VAMIRoueimntbu '
keo oS’soTE Pnoresen
1 Do UK« MM IM HS! rorem..
\PLACE.‘ExPLAwNE0 We oBnecw*
—V
General in Search of an Army
~ ENERAL IKE EISENHOWER will return from Europe
U in a few days to make a report to the American people
as to the ability and willingness of western European nations
to put up stiff resistance against Russia.
He may make an optimistic and enthusiastic report,
saying that Britain, France, western Germany, Holland,
Belgium, Italy and the Scandinavian countries are itching to
get into uniform, to form such a barrier. However the pre-
liminary dispatches about his travels do not indicate such
a happy circumstance.
He has been chosen to spearhead the western European
re-armament program, with special regard to the organiza-
tion of armies to meet the Russian menace. He is a great
and successful general, but thus far the only army of any
size that is definitely planned is that of the United States.
ACCORDING to David Lawrence and other impartial ob-
xx servers, the western European nations are “willing to
deal with Russia,” and they are not at all enthusiastic about
throwing down the gauntlet to communism. They are fairly
well impregnated with communism themselves. The British
government is frankly socialistic, with at least one cabinet
member adhering to communism. Their regime, in the long
run, would lead to the same kind of statism as that of Rus-
sia, except that it would be accomplished peacefully instead
of by violence. We Americans have shut our eyes and have
contributed enormously tri this socialist regime, hoping that
it will head off the more violent version, but only time will
tell whether this form of appeasement of a dangerous ide-
ology really pays off.
Ralph Olsen, th* big Methodist layman in Cordell, sounds it has done. This demand to felt no
th* call for th* annual groundhog day supper and wants us only .in. congreaa, but in local com"
there. it’s a deal where the men do all the cooking and serve "ume
heaping plates of food to the fat and skinny ones alike.
• • •
The young people in Hobart, and some of the oldsters,
should be greatful to Roy Elkina, town marshal, for being
a generous and understanding soul. It is against the law in
Hobart to double-park on some of the downtown streets
and Mr. Elkins pleads with them again to quit it Drat it
he dsesn’t want to get tough about it, but it tt against the
law and he may start tagging and dragging in ears any
time unless the double parking ceases.
PVER since 1939 France has suffered terribly from de-
L featism and hopelessness. Whether this is justifiable
or not, it cannot be ignored.
A realistic view of the European situation leads to the
conclusion that if those nations refuse to help themselves,
there is no good reason why we should go far out of our way
—beyond the strategy of American self-defense on a global
basis—to help them.
Y "IDLIKFTOSELL
yoUA W ORDER, <
MR.OJeHT.WILL j
You COME TO LUNHF
2sqjkwei r
ViTOF NUTS-"/
3 • 33.
‘85
The Eyes of Texas Are Upon Us, So It Seems
NHARLES H. RIPLEY of Wichita Falls, Texas, has ad-
U dressed an open letter to fellow Texans—especially
those living near the border—in which he urges them to
give enthusiastic and whole-hearted support to the project
of voting 50 percent additional sales tax—in Oklahoma.
He says:
“The businessmen of the border counties of Texas should
help Oklahomans campaign for this increase in every way
possible. The higher th* tax in Oklahoma, the more trade
we will have from th* state in our sales-tax-free Texas.”
He seems to be quite familiar with the pressure group
that is trying for this increase. He tells of the many em-
ployes who administer the distribution of assistance funds,
and says there ar* about 100,000 direct beneficiaries, plus
about 200,000 “sons and daughters who have shirked their
moral responsibilitity and shifted the care of their parents
upon the state." Thus a minority group, because of its
organized bloc pressure, might be able o defeat the general
majority.
help to keep this chatter alive.
• • •
Reckon we’d better drop the question of who has th*
largest number of grandchildren. There Merna to be no
limit. It started off with 46. In no time a grandma came
in with 56. Thia week we find that Mn. Minnie Gregory in
Ames, who is only 71 years old, has 23 living grandchildren
and 57 great-grandchildren, a total of 80. We wanted to
call It off there, but a more recent report shows that Mr.
and Mrs. B. M. Witcher In Rocky have a total of 86. We’re
willing to go to IM if you’ll hurry.
* • *
unbotlettea artucles, y.*?* ans
mt** ruk and The OKlahoma .Pubushine c
omaibnilty tat war Ml* euntody «r returm.
• Uta Mt tat republleation of •« MW «
I la *<• pnper eda also the local newa publ
Ad
OH
Cad
X at SI G—-6- a ha
*2;
135
dealers art anorting at cording of “The Thing" which U not
"piker prices" thelr American counter- - .....
• •
The periodic bulletin from the meat packers announce*
Mt-
been moved up and combined with Prime. The beef that for- would like to be a full-fledged senator
merly was known as U. 8. Good has become Choice. And the again.
grades of younger beef known as Commercial, became Good. For thia reason, intimates expeot
The new Commercial grade is still below, in quality. So there Kefauver to resist the inevitable at-
you have the lineup, in thissorderiPrime Choice, Goodsand KK March U com-
Commercial. You may choose according to your pocketbooK ""AI. 1k. t. M
-ne —ennesecan WOuG 1111 10 859
his committee replaced by some king
of permanent government commis-
lion that would act a a watchdog
over the doings at the interstate
0 NFe* /:**;
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- - g-'»L e dt -r. < ■ Pi
uocras
.
1 acet MINO aeeAK •7
eoiMN feQoeNrvmBK
rtMN rut eoov > "" *
•mw-‘ oeG voue OMNrON-----
By ALBERT EDWARD WIGGAM
—It's tmpossible to cay absolutely,
but halr of all hospital beds in
merica are occupied by mental pa-
tienta and we have hardly half enough
acilities. One-third of all mental pa-
lents are schizophrenics, which
means, according to Dr. R. G Hos-
U
V
A CHARITABLE iNSmUTlOH .
ENTERTAINMENT, My Roar!
WHy ISNT IT ITEMIZED?
f WASITLUNMFA SHOW? >
yemnesasonrerinniconos-hl"oiaopguaaraosa
loyal Texans, on the ground that if Oklahoma industry and
general economic* are crippled, Texas will get the direct
benefit. To rub it in, he recalls the old and still valid
maxim: "The power to tax is the power to destroy."
He closes his letter by saying: “Let's help Oklahoma
out—out of business."
2 *
_
Eta aoswcr^^T^^oypS
ernment, irrespective of party, stands united ondhe issue or dhimshganahancouzzng butletaman
declaring Red China an aggressor. Soviet RussiaAATWd MikaAmaEpeFiers and he can’
are now aware that, whatever may have beenMhe dsertohsAEit tAick offhi"shoes, loosen his
of the past here on foreign policy, there is undimitnnothik leth beltEf a few notches, and
th* matter of resisting aggression. M E EEj W** W homfj haven o rest and
The action of both houses of congress is V fa*ea»iV H
importance whether or not the UN votes favorabluhe dek «aShgmakpumasscoui « it
lean resolution to brand Red China as the aggressor. Had the T"m - ’
AM sayandttyouwuxobe’ ^’friend soldler bonus. He suggests the UP should sample a tew more
young men had had plenty to eat, but . . . And help my heart to live ... I
- - - -■ am so deeply sorry and ... I really
want to do ... As much as I am able.
BUSINESS ORGANIZATION, NOT
---- 5!,
ng
to the extent to which th con-
gress would go in backing up
the executive here.
If, on the other hand, the UN now
fail* to muster the necessary ma-
jority for the adoption of the
American resolution, the UN mem-
bers will face a rather embarrassing
situation.
Th* United States will have to
deelde then whether to go H
atone in the far east or whether
to consider that the UN haa failed
in dealing with aggrension. Such
a failure could mean that. In any
future agzresaions by any other
nations, the United States would
feel tree to dinamoclate itaett and
art atom.
« • •
tributors et Continental Pren ener
have been controlled .bymobstersand
that them "independent" distributon
and sub-distributors ar. to
substdlaries of Continental Pres.
-
„ WT__SYDNEY—The itch-
Bug War ing citiens at New
south Wales are fighting thelr own
war against aggression these daya, but
many say it’s a losing battle. Nobody
is able to beat the countless millions
M moequitos, flea*, flyby termltes
Argentine ants and blowflies nowin-
vading th* state after a year of reeord
rains and floods.
Aggresttve fleas have just about
made'alcep bnpattbto here in crowded
Sydney, th* state capital. Any em-
ploye who tom up heavy-eyed and
I late to work has only to say “fleaa." >
Everybody understands.
"... And in capitalist America is not enough rice for enslaved
worker . . . is forced to eat dish called 'beefsteak’ . .
50,000 Increase
,.3
1Gi
■ 864
geg l
2
2 "
m Le w wga MvE
erosion, declining intelligence and
lowering of the human average." So
concludes an eminent authority on
population and world conditions. Read
it yourself; see if you can disprove it
groups at criminals that th* Ketau-
ver committee has exposed since it
wss crested last May.
Wayman Cornelsen in Fairview evidently is a hound for T-naoomamittentinaaipuabhabenr;
punishment. Anyway, th* big auto and machinery man ha* organized crime is an intrastate evil,
agreed to serve another year as president of his town’s cham- and th* proper subject for continued
ber of commerce. It doesn’t seem to interfere with hl* fishing, federal surveillance
TTETcopero"agennen-njnrleen
BIBLE VERSE: Watch, and pray, that ye enter not into temptation; the spirit indeed to willing, but the fleah fa weak.—Matthew 26:41.
sent... Because I know each semtence order of paying for putting out bees on clover and allalfa farms, the nm week of February, Bt. 1ouin
- Probably down, says Robert Cook, was ... A message that you meant They point out that when bees are turned loose In these fields and the west coast some time ater
editor of "Journal of Heredity," in • • Please phone me, dear, or write A they serve to increase the yield of hay and valuable seed and the Detroit hearta**, and Jitew Y<r>
___ notes Andin zourownwaz S the land owner should pay th* bee keepers for helping that inperhp theidsiweektin Febnuuru
lemma." He pointe out that world • • • Thal you ar.suilii , Meh w. don’t know The top objective of tn* Kerauvw
population is exploding like an atom . . ■ Your own-forever-J.___________much. We don’t know.___________________________________________ committee from the bezinningwant
■ - ------ as8emble evidence U8U IEnV PeI
They’ll Do It Every Tim* -iw. u»
- - ..... — — — . ------— "Ther o no doubt that the —-
* • *
The Pessimist on the Ada News observes that a lot of boost- done. ___
ers are always out after some new highway when, in a lot of min.docann. Sotsishiisitn’ot.
towns, there isn’t a town street that they can get over safely week of its life, there is
in anything but an oxcart. public grumbling because Kefauver
* a * Ihas snubbed these towns.
Editor Jones in Garber opines that it will take mor* than a in Chicago alone, committee inves-
straw vote of 100 people to indicate the drift of sentiment of tigattire had enough material for al
Oklahoma* 800,000 voter* on the questions of local option and ?Lrowe eut off
after thro* days because at the press
of other businees
man committeo wiU complete Ito
L public hearings before February
M, the date upon which it to scheduled
to give a preliminary report to the
7 T
22270
1 RpN (
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Jz‛V
AKLAHOMA’s newspaper editors and publishers
• their helper* begin gathering in the city today for the an- Salvatore "Red’’ Italiano, one et
nual midwinter convention, highlighted by the Press Grid- Tampa’s loading underworld goons,
iron club’s banquet and razz of political victories, defeats, claims, was holing up in a New Orleans hos-
EsUavSrr-we.iBbangtormmi
by the city’* newspapermen as a treat for the visiting newsmen ’ ,
and the politician* who are put on the pan. However, there rTHE committee also has broadened
are two day* of serious shop talk in which way* and means of 1 it* search for George 8. May,
putting out butter newspapers are uiven study andtexercise. Sr"engotamntnorsnangdnecountn,p"enu
Th* Smoking Room ha* attended most of the summer conven- just Chicago.
tions since 1921 and all but two of the midwinter sessions since New sbpenas caling for May’a ap-
the gridiron was born before the first Murray became governor, pearance "forthwith’’ in Washington
This column is devoted in part to the task of maintaining a were sent to the United states mar-
Ue between big town and little town and we are ever so grate- shals at Chicago and at San Francisco,
ful to the editors and thelr reporters for bite of wisdom that whereaone o Mays branch offtces u
What’s Going on Here?
PEP. JAMES E. DOUGLAS of Durant jiggled the curtain
I just a bit Tuesday, and said that the best way to pre-
vent the “shucking" of legislative bills is to stay on the job
until final adjournment. He added that he did so, last ses-
•ion, and “drank nothing but milk.”
Was he insinuating that some of th* member* were
drinking too much coffee?
I - . ■■
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 63, No. 303, Ed. 2 Thursday, January 25, 1951, newspaper, January 25, 1951; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1994531/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.