Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 62, No. 21, Ed. 3 Friday, March 2, 1951 Page: 2 of 11
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THIRTY—FRIDAY, MARCH 2, 1951
T
Retail Sales Rise
04,
to be from 13 to 17 percent above the
a year ago.
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YOU EVER TASTED
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Handcuffed to crusty pans ?
YOUR MONEY BACK!
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Wonderful flavor and
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40% MORE MEAT
than U. S. Government
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BROWN BEANS
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20,000 Stricken by Flu
. Outbreak in Beaumont
2,000 Sooner
. Homes Sign Up
In Security Pact
36
28
High in Food Value...
Low In Cost
, i
Brillo now lasts longer.’
MORE SHINES IN EVERY PAO!
onstrations demanding nationalization
of the Anglo-Iranian Oil company.
8T. LOUIS, March 2—U.P)—Chimes
and soft music will replace cupid in
the St. Louis marriage license bureau.
"It's an eyesore,” recorder of deeds
ri
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Try Brown Beauty Beans, Mexican Style
--..and the New Spanish Rice
6 mu . ihiak misture. dun.
Roll la erackter erumba, beoten
Why not? Crisco ittrelf is digestible. It’s
pure—it's all-vegetable. So if you love the
wonderful tattinen of fried foods, just for-
get that they sometimes can be heavy and
hard to digest. You're safe when you fry
the Critco way! 9 out of 10 docton say foods
fried in Crisco are easy to digest!
1 cup leftever meot
Onien
4
mM. Orein. Serve wilh temete MM. W
meet grevy Mekes six twe-ineh meundt.
L A NLACK, »ia mnuune
M win, AlKANSAS
Arkenme’ tergew Nice Grower
2 cups meshed
potatoes*
1 tbsp, buffer
% top. salt
Mi top. pepper
1 egg yolk
bLow
Cost
m Privately Grown
Hire
season.
Total retail volume was estimated
Murderer Shunt Featt,
Diet on Empty Stomach
OSSINING, N. Y, March 2—(U.P—
Gilberto C. Walker, 37, died in Sing
Sing prison's electric chair on an
empty stomach, prison officials said
Friday.
Walker, of New York, was electro-
cuted at 11:05 p. m. Thursday for the
murder of a Harlem grocer, Pedro
Sepulveda. In a holdup in 1949, He
became the first condemned prisoner
in 10 years at Sing Sing to turn up
his nose at the special "last meal” of-
fered traditionally in death row.
Today's mashed potatoes will taste twice
as nice tomorrow, when you fry them light
and crisp in pure, snowy Crisco! And they'll
be diantible, too!
1 tbsp, grated onion
% cup fine bread
crumbs
1 egg+2 tbsps.
water
Crisco for frying
30.000 or more flu cases here, but he
said the outbreak was of a mild va-
riety. usually running its course in
two to three days.
Many doctors blame the flu out-
break in this region on the fact that
, southeast Texas has had one of the
most severe winters in its history,
with unusual cold and dampness.
Murray Polishes
Session Message;
Engagements Wait
Sroppper
Pipeline Head Retires
NEW YORK, March 3—(- Trans-
Arabian Pipe Line Co. Friday an-
nounced the retirement of Burt K.
Hull as president. He will be succeeded
by C. A. Swigart, vice-president.
Bright
d
Mix potatoes with 1 egg yolk and grated
onion. Shape into rolls about 2%" long
and thick as a finger. Coat with flour, then
roll in diluted egg and then in fine bread
crumbs. Melt 4 to 5 tbsps. Crisco in an
TEHRAN, Iran, March 3—(P—‘The
central committee of the underground
communist Tudeh party sent a letter
to the Majlis (parliament) Friday de-
manding that the ban on Tudeh ac-
tivities be lifted.
The letter declared the suppression
of Tudeh was illegal and denied that
the party was implicated in the at-
tempted assassination of the shah on
Feb. 4. 1949. The party was outlawed
the next day,
in recent weeks the party has been
Increasingly active behind the scenes,
"16
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Give quick iparbla to dingy pans!
A sturdy Brillo pad-uitb-ioap out-
shine* all cleansers tested!
No soaking. No scraping.
A square Brillo metal-fiber pad
mbuhl of " cooked-on " crust jarit
And Brillo has jeweler's polish.
Sbintt pans! Fine for stoves, too!
RED box—seep Wied pods
CREEN box—pods plus coke soap
u
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HACK'S
ZENITH
H shon
greint
hacks
SUPREME
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groini
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- BEAUMONT, March 3—(U.P— Up-
■ wards of 30,000 persons here are suf-
' fering from influenza, medical sources
2 said Friday, and a heavy outbreak
also was reported at Port Arthur,
Texas, 20 miles to the south. Another
southeast Texas port city, Orange, re-
ported its outbreak of flu was declin-
ing
17
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Make plenty I Folks love them I
CRISCO'S FRIED POTATO LOOS
(4 servings)
1
20,00
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| aa crvoibs Opel*. Sty le
' deep tar or Mbs inte pelty shepn and
Mir vics, ereund meet, popper oed me
■Miap. iehever vegetebles or yegetable
too* mey be ued. Meisten with mm or
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Dun * Bradstreet reported Cupid Called Eyetore;
with part of the buying influx at- ' ’
tributed to proximity of the Easter Will End 4&Year Reign
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Here's a rite of uniform quality that,
always cooks Iba some, pockego
ofter package... thaf’s a "pepper-
upper" tor pinch-penny budgets end
finicky appetitesl Sea what you buy
... know that you're buying the best
...LA. MACK'S Privately Grown
■Cfl
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New ’Shine meter'tests prove
BRILLO
gives
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Oklahoma City Times
ns ieaMe
Ibr caiesandpies and tasty
use Crisco
ITS DIGESTIBLE.'
■
Gov Murray stayed away from his
capitol office Friday to put the fin-
ishing touches on the message he will
give to a joint session of the legisla-
ture at 3 p. m. Tuesday.
His engagements for the day were
put off and his office staff told cal-
lers he was “out of town.”
In his second message to the legisla-
ture since It. convened January 2, the
governor will make more specific rec-
ommendations for laws he wants
passed.
Among these is a bill now in the
legislature to eliminate political in-
fluence as a major factor in securing
a state job.
The governor also is expected to
come up with a plan for raising more
school revenue at county level, rather
than from the state's treasury.
• 09*
4
If' . . .
Morse urged that a manpower
ceiling of 3 million or 3,100.000 be
placed on the armed forces instead
of 3,463,305, which the Pentagon
gives as its goal. He Mid congress
could raise or lower the ceiling
later.
Cain Mid Morse's proposal would
put military planning on "such a
hit-or-miss, day-to-day basis” that
it would be impossible to build up
anything as complicated as a navy,
airforce, a marine corps, or an
army."
Morse had accused all the mili-
tary forces of inefficiency and a
large waste of manpower and dol-
lars. Caln Mid some of this was
true but "we are not wasting any
manpower in Korea."
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For Upper Sevinge- Buy
L A BLACK’S "osmy Ria
la 3 Fouad Kref Begel
Tivo Postoffice 1
Veterans Retire
To ‘Take It Easy9
Two veteran employes of the local
postoffice department retired from ac- 1
tive service Thursday, one to do a lot
of fishing and the other just to take 1
it easy.
Oscar T. Myers, 63, of 1414 NE 30,
who has been in the postal service
since 1917, told the postal authorities
that he's going to take it easy. He
entered the postal service as a rural
carrier out of the McLoud postoffice, .
came to Oklahoma City in 1934 andl
has been in the mailing division of
the local poetoffice since.
William H. Tormohlen, 55. of 1707
8 Middleton. entered the postal serv-
ice here in 1930 as a carrier, most of
it in the parcel post section. He has ,
been working out of the Capitol HUI
branch station. He told postal of-
ficials he's spending his time "going
----*----"
Iran Red Underground
Demands Ban Be Lifted
8" or 9" skillet. Slowly fry potato logs
turning to brown on all sides. Serve piping
hot with tomatoes and cole slaw.
• Leftover mrubad p«ta>ntt may be ud
Ge,
"an.a.
—e/,
Hensa^*
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Dr. Fred Sutton. Beaumont city particularly in connection with dem-
’ health officer, estimated there were
-
1
1 .%
Oklahoma housewives are beginning
to comply with the new amendment
to the federal social security law,
which gives domestic servants in pri-
vate homes the benefits of the solcal
security law. Farmers also are com-
plying with the law for the benefit of
their hired hands.
Up to the end of February, 3,016
housewives had opened social security
accounts for their maids, cooks, but-
lers and gardeners with the collector
of internal revenue, Charles Heinen,
chief of the wage and excise section,
said Friday. In the Mme period 361
farmers in the state have come into
compliance with the new law.
Legal Requirements Outlined
Heinen said to give domestic ser-
vants the benefits of the law, such
employes must have worked at least
34 days in each three months period
of the calendar year and such ser-
vants must hsve been paid at least
$50 in cash regardless of what other
compensation they have received, such
as quarters.
Agricultural workers, to get the
benefits of the law, must have been
employed by farm owners for at least
60 days in each quarterly period and
must have received at least 150 in
’ cash for their services regardless of
all other compensation such as board
and lodging, Heinen explained.
Steps Are Explained
For housewives and farm owners to
comply with the new amendment they
must take four major steps to get
1" started, Heinan Mid. He outlined these
as follows:
ONE—Call or write the collector of
internal revenue to secure a social se-
curity employer number.
TWO—Make sure each servant or
farm hand has a social security ac-
count number which can be obtained
by the employe at the social security
Offices in the Mercantile building.
THREE—Deduct 1% percent from
the wages paid these servants, wheth-
er on the daily. weekly or monthly
basis.
FOUR—Remit to the collector, at
the end of each quarterly period of
the year, 3 percent of the wages paid.
This includes the 1% percent the em-
ploye has contributed to his or her
security and the rest is the contribu-
■'* tion by the housewife or the farm
1 owner whose employes are under the
provisions of the act.
Each Reported Separately
Heinen also pointed out that if a
housewife has more than one servant
each must be considered separately as
, each person who works in the house-
hold regularly two days a week comes
under the law if the cash payment
provision is met.
He also pointed out that board and
room or quarters are not counted as
wages but carfare is if the housewife
pays the carfare in cash.
He suggested that each housewife
who regularly employs servants should
keep a record of each day the servant
works and how much was paid in
wages each day or week or whatever
the pay period may be.
Likewise, Heinen advised house-
wives U they do not get in compliance
with the law they may some day find
themselves facing penalties because
the maid or cook or gardener may
have a social security number and
be claiming benefits under the law.
JI
9
1
4
Crispy-brown Potato Logs
) fried fluffy-light in Crisco I
Anthony J. Denny said of the statue
of cupid which hovered beningly over
mates-to-be for 46 years. He favored •!
set of chimes and a radio.
Denny said if the statue wasn't re-
moved from city hall in 19 days—by'
St. Patrick's day, be would paint to
green.
Banquet Hostess
Miss Nancy Kidd, Hl-Y sweet-
heart at Shawnee highschool,
will be hostess at the annual
Hl-Y sweetheart banquet Sat-
urday evening, in the Hotel
Aldridge ballroom. Miss Kidd
is the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Summie Kidd, Shawnee.
High point of the banquet will
be the announcement of Miss
Kidd’s successor as Hl-Y
sweetheart.
53/"
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Crisco the one and only brings you
light, digestible fried foods
I
MORI WOMEN COOK WITH CRISCO THAN WITH ANY OTHER BRAND OF SHORTENING!
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66
53
WASHINGTON, March 2—(—
Senator Cain (R., Wash.), urged
congress Friday to approve a draft
of 18-year-olds because “we need
every man we can get in Korea ”
Caln, an army volunteer in World
war II. hinged his appeal for sup-
port of the pending universal mili-
tary training bill to a blistering
criticism of amendments proposed
by Senator Morse (R., Ore.).
”How impractical and how un-
realistic can we become in our ef-
forts to sugar-coat this pill—to
evade the issues?" Cain asked.
“I am hopeful that this legisla-
' tion will be enacted and that it
will not be circumscribed or crippled
by amendments of the type recom-
mended (by Morse),” Cain said.
One of the amendments sought
by Morse would make 18% the mini-
mum age for inductions. Four days
of debate over this and other pro-
posals backed by the Oregon Re-
publican have delayed a senate de-
cision as to when voting on the
bill will begin.
Morse in a series of speeches ear-
lier this week Mid the bUl was
drafted along Unes laid down by the
department of defense and does not
conform to the wishes of the people.
Cain emphatically denied that the
senate measure was either an ad-
ministration or Pentagon bill.
"This represents the combined
efforts of a great number of people,
from practically every responsible !
segment of our government and of
our public life,” Cain Mid.
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requirements.
Draft of Boys Urged In Dolar Volume
To Push Korean War
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 62, No. 21, Ed. 3 Friday, March 2, 1951, newspaper, March 2, 1951; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1994738/m1/2/: accessed May 26, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.