The Edmond Enterprise (Edmond, Okla.), Vol. 52, No. 1, Ed. 1 Tuesday, January 13, 1953 Page: 6 of 8
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EDMOND OKLAHOMA
The Edmond Enterprise
Is Entered at the Post Office at Edmond Oklahoma as Matter
of the Second Class under Act of March 3 1879
— Published By —
THE EDMOND PUBLISHING CO
13 South Broadway Phone 26 Edmond Okla
'rank L Dobyns Jr Editor and Publisher
Mrs Frank L Dobyns Jr Business Manager
Humphrey Bard Managing Editor
F M Lewis Circulation Manager
SUBSCRIPTION RATES — ENTERPRISE & BOOSTER
Per year by carrier in Edmond $350
Six Months by carrier in Edmond $190
Per year by mail in county $350
Two years by mail in county $595
Per Year Elsewhere in US $450
Six Months Elsewhere in US $250
Member Associated Newspapers of Oklahoma County
OKLAHOMA WEATHER
Oklahoma IONTS her weather
She views it with great pride
And when it takes a holiday
She takes it in her stride
Some days the clnudi han r! low and
Some days are full of sun
She knows the wind can he quite fierce
Or mild and full el sm
And should a blizzard show it face
Turn all the landscape gray
Take heart my friend do not dispair
It only lasts a day
Oklahoma knows her veat her
And when visitors criticize
She lau0s and shrugs her shoulders
"We love it" she replies
Clarice Jackson
I
IIINIONEIMINUE
EDSON IN WASHINGTON
U S Has Made Giant Strides
In 20 Years Politics or Not
BY PETER EDSON P:71 s'4'
NEA Washington Correspondent
WASIIINGTON—(NEA)—The United States which President-elect
" Dwight D Eisenhower's Republican administration takes over
on Jan 20 is a far different country from what It was when the
Democrats took over 20 years ago The changes are worth examining
as a matter of sheer growth and not just as a matter of political
cause and effect
The fear of the atom bomb and of another war have taken the
places of fears of poverty in 1932 The U S armed forces numbered
200000 men then and the world was enjoying a disarmament treaty
Today the U S has 35 million men and women in unarm
There is social security for most of the people today—old-age
retirement unemployment insurance and such things
The standard of living is visibly higher Its new ultimate seems
to be the deep freeze the automatic washing machine and the
television set—all of which wove just being dreamed about in 1932
Legalized drinking has replaced bootlegging home brew and bathtub
gin in all but the local option slates The number of passenger cars
has more than doubled from 20 million to over 40 million
qC1100L attendance has increased from 27 million to 29 million
which isn't as much of an increase as it should be in proportion
to the growth in population from 125 million to 155 million people
But the number of college graduates has increased from 122000 in
1932 to 271000 for i952
Infant mortality rates have been cut down from 60 per thousand
to 30 The total death rate has dropped from 11 per thousand to
nine Life expectancy has been raised from 60 to 66 for men 63
to 71 for women
There are more and better food and consumers' goods available
and they cost more The cost-of-living index has more than
doubled from the low of 92 in 1933 to over 190 today
Statistically the per capita disposable income has jumped from
$383 a year in 1932 to an estimated $1466 today
More people are earning this money The labor force has Increased
from 51 million in 1932 to nearly 64 million today Unemployment
has dropped from over 12 million to less than three million So the
net figures on employment are an increase from 39 million to 62
million—which is nearly 60 per cent
THE number of families or 'households as the census takers call
them has increased from 30 million to 45 million Over a million
new housing units have been built in each of the last five years
They cost a lot more than houses used to cost too
Perhaps the greatest changes of the last 20 years have come in
farm life They are measured not alone in better roads and more
of them rural electrification and inside plumbing In spite of
declining farm population farm production has increased through
new farm practices and programs that together mean a higher
standard of rural living than the world has ever known
These are the facts of everyday living as they hit the average
citizen Over and above them is a vast realm of figures which
Measure the economic growth of the nation as a whole
The gross national product of goods and services has risen steadily
from $56 billion in 1932 to a rate of $342 billion The index of
industrial production is up from 58 to 230
Bank loans are up from $30 billion in June 1933 to $140 billion
Consumer credit is up from $35 billion to $22 billion In this same
20 years the government debt has risen from $20 billion to $260
billion but few people seem to worry much about debts
Federal tax collections have risen from $2 billion to $62 billion
In these same 20 years There's plenty of worry about that
Funny Business
i!
P
I 114 '144:176T:0111F NIA &erne tat
U 5 te
"I couldn't get used to Junior being eway at college
again!"
THYY WOULD READ 'YOUR AD
Too IF IT APPEARED HERE
Birt- Still'a—n-Ronor Not-Li6hticCoille By
'et4E91
PET
- m ecoki
!i katerc rt I it
Av 4: r-- -w02 r7
lit1
- -
-"kli5C1":K7
cwire Bill
Barliwire Bill 11'4:1'41Aigi VI P' 17 i
i 1 it 1 41 F 4 F -- (0 1
1 - —lel b ow 41Fir -A: !
1 An Clitimer Iliiti 'tv54s 1 k OA n c tal lita
III( II 1'i:: A
1 10 1
it Ili f ! e !I "-1:'' - ' La--j lirrl:1 1:7161 -'1
7
7 (I: ! I !7: 77v 1 7k771! f :
you' -Lilis- lel o I ) v-k ana By
t :
I z11 i L i vw 1 !u! c' 1 Ellt ALICE E°WEES ' ' '
1 c1I 1!: - ll! 1 nt L n'c '1H INrect of
FAMILY
! 1 hr dy v hrn i id i LIFE0' --'''
I t'(tft 1111ti in ILA ri: lic t 1114 S T IT 1-11 E 1 '-''' ' ' r
1 1 ( “ ' 1 1 1 ( ' t MA s :I Nc:u Ito 1
:tilvi ininl( I ii) tiii s vIng- 1 UNTYING THE APRON
1ut1 just as fall of the Bildo as a STRINGS
June Bug is full of -mnonhirle” How can a chilri be la lpe 1
and a "huttei fly full o ti ainlows:" to gtin independerue glaCi- : I
1 "Billy" and his good vile live ui'll‘v? Vhat may resu:t of an
over Ill'iir NO1 IMI1 sinye 'hey i t-- IY-deP(ndenf and 101-
tired a few years ago As a pioneer " tell chll'i is sucidenlY (lit t
preacher in this countiy Billy ulf fr"Iii Par"ntid guidam 0 (
held some rousin' revivals and and "nticd? Discuss: A suc- t
like the 101'a WIti a carpenter re'sful r)Arent hecumes an un-
(11''I'lli'ld:iI'''leriligi rt1)11- slaw ly it ti1-s I
When Ile wanted ta build a chinch
house he just hollered "Come On
Boys Here Goes Up The Lord's Yeal S for a elill'i to becA)me a 11-an
House!" And it went Lip! oe woman During those ycir3 i
He took part in some "big de- every aid known to seiem e i I(
bates" in his active days run fir "ed to hell-) Children devcloli ' I
' office a time er two a rancher "on P'lent3 have at hand information
1 the side" and when no thought '11“'nf the v111'2 of a'0-1!to dk't I
la church needed neouragement'ftc:h iir telaxLitiln :n1 7!i
vIty thundet intightenin'
Ili' list --i(1!It'slirisuti)v:1(1LN'-c:tilti11-1'':t11'al-!lasle"a11111'
tore up the checks the folks the
1doir id1-11 to ro-e!come 1
Walking Is Cheaper
MIANII Okla gr —711s Louis
Price had a $700 lesson on how to
drive an automobile She drove
cautiously down the street tried
to nun a corner lost control of
the car and plowed into a garage
Frantically feeling for the brake
pedal she continued straight ahead
into a late model car shoving it
into the corner of a nearby house
Getting The Bird
PORTLAND Me Itl'—Return-
ing empty-handed from a hunting
trip Charles Coleman found on his
kitchen floor a dead partridge
which had crashed through a window
°I I'LL BUY THAT Pia's
iCTUN HOW' I SOLD 5‘)v1E
STLIPF FROM WE ATTIC
4'rIT1 A WANT AD -
y d-—r---
1 i4 '4‘)
Ifol
)41E
TIC
--11
7111
Sell "White Elephant?
BuyWhat You Want
1
THE EDMOND ENTERPRISE
ACROSS
1 Female
parents
5 Diplomacy
9 Source
of indigo
10 Set of boxes
Orient)
IL Net
12 13ranches
14 Fish
15 Egyptian
god
17 Oriental
nurse
18 Not many
20 Kitchen
utensil
22 Luzon
native
23 Snare
25 Gesture of
deference
(Chin)
27 Period
of time
29 Hawaiian
food
30 Savors
33 Concludes
38 Chop as
wood
37 Gratuity
39 Gazelle
(Tibet)
40 God of love
42 Bench-like
seat
44 Chinese
measure
45 Bogs down
47 Fence
pieces
49 Girl's name
50 Peruvian
Indian
51 Long Coarse
nap of cloth
52 Look
askance
CHM NTH
DOWN 16 American
1 Temper editor-
( collog ) writer
2 Miscellany 19 Longfellow's
3 Russian middle
villages name
4 Slumber 21 Apex
5 It Is 24 Stroke
(contracted) lightly
5 Pilaster 26 Sorrow
7 Conakuning
fire
8 A fleshy
fruit
II Put
through
a 3ieve
33 Irish
)
1 ta Th
5 MI6
28 Still
30 Pronoun
31 E82 ie'll
nests
32 Drink d
slowly
34 Monetary
unit U S)
35 Cebine
monkeys
38 Danger
-1J
P-18
41 Bristle-like
process
43 Decrease
as power
48 Droop in
the nuddle
48 Frozen
water
1
1
I
- 1
in the degree to which they take to get along with people Can he
"Billy" helped build schools and
t-s I ! o do hi i someone con-
"preacher colleges" in his active atvantag of the in just they lea n t t s f
klavs and is still intei ested in i
n LA way they develop Itinues to t11 him what to do
-preacher colleges" where they 1 phslciiny mentally Fpilitually what to buy w hat friends to have
still believe the Bible to he the Isoiilly A large share of the re- when to go to bed Nvhen to take a
word of Gd Almighty! And I m nsibility for this variation rests bat h—whon to do the hundreds of
o' lp
a gout to write him and tell him Im the home It is there that the things people must learn to do
that the day after he visited me foundation is laid that attitudes One need not agree with the oft-
that feelings for repeated statement that "a sue-
that I got an invitation :Z'oni a 1 a (kvelped
college to come ovt-T 7ol1 :1ive lior gainA someone or some!hing ces4u1 paient becomes on un-
their class of "Young preachers at Luill up that prejudieer iii e needed pal cut" but the uccess-
a "treatise" on f‘vangebsiol evelved It Is there dso that a! ful parent certainly becomL!s less
I lIti a bwkin ter Pistol rcte 93 child glows out of babyhood ! needed os the child beCOMOS more
thiough the stages of childhood and more self-reliant He (ontin-
1ears "voting" also Joe Kill'em
us to need his parents all his lif
iildbrcath Cal Tinney's iinch !nto intturitygrows in Lis bil
to take care of himself to os- I but in di-ifevent ways
columnist and after our -cab'net 1
t foreman and Bill Hoge Tulsa Lay
' I iliVel M "We W in hide out' "proph-
eeies" of what we think will liinn 1 rilossiaDD pll 1111 LAST WM'S
to 1)is du l in' the next four yeirs'
Visilernally Bill I ANSWER rs
THE A
WASHINGT 01:
it(e"(c)0tft
When President-Elect Eiserttevi
er heard what President Tr-crtlact
said about demagoguery anct lii
trip to Korea he not only hi ! the
ce:ling but sat down and
out a statement for the press
If that statement had been pub-
itshed it would have sizzled r und r
the world It would have made r
:'ire headlines than some of the tl
Presdont's own torrid letters and
:iress statements
u4hly here is what Elton-
aower wrote out in longhand itict
mauled to say:
If President Truman had g-one
o K irea it would have been pclit-
'cal drnagoguery since Mr Tru-
man is a politician and cloon't
na the military backgrount to
asess such a situation
Hiweer Jim Hagerty pren-re War
1c:cus adviser to the Presiient
tactfu!ly talked him out of
lo the end the statement was
alieled: -file and forget''
71:1 Pipeline
General MacArthur shakes
hands with President-Elect
Eisenhower following their con-
ference in the New York City
home of John Foster Dulles
secretary of state-to-be Mac-
Arthur said he would meet
again with Eisenhower to dis-
cuss the former's "clear and
definite" solution to the Korean
Eiect tactfully talked hint out of SIAMESE TWINS'
In the end the statement was
a1eled: "file and forget" First Was in 1100
Although Siamese twins are rare
r Cc Pipeline they are not unique The Brodie
Backstage with n:e—Aboard tL Nuns who recently underwent a
-rirser Helena Ike played a lot I separation operation in Chicago
f biOLLie and road wedern stories are the latest of some 340 cases
veor h n't conferring irs recorded in medical history The
at bridge was Ilerhert first was in 1100 when Eliza and
niazodl the new athariwy iierer- 11ary Chulkhurst were born in Bid-
ami piitrerae bess also two sir denden England
oiiatiite naval officers At NATO These sisters joined at the hips
Ire used to play bridge with Go and shoulders lived for 34 years
Al Chuenthor cersidered the I c - After one died the other rejected
player in the army the plea of an early surgeon that
at Kaneohe Iliesk aii 11 be try to save her and she too
vas completely eff his garte Thi Idled a short time later
the refisn he retiod to give The most famous were Chinese
soore to newsmeo afloie twins born in Siam It was from
NA once did be make the 16L111 them that the term "Siamese
thiimih he ruefaliy r twins" came into usage The twins
na:1:ci that at Augusta he hi Chang and Eng enioved nrosuier
I in: tV7:‘1 h
111l(!1 C
ncr
!- 7 la 7! i 64 ' "1-
t ! Eeet p
otillsincgaraenedrsEr1'zit'herIPTe1
fl LINER HITS PIER
o hytir
I by the Kul can VI::t
L '''7'' 112 ("1111- was n specbc reasp I Only Slight Damage
n n d was off !i 114h winds sweeping across Eng
-7 (:) I 1-1707 baseball cap ight - lan :! slammed the giant new liner
' -t 11:c 5 ancl Pirk sil" tn (1 States against a picr at
':: 12 's Ai!!' t Pearl 11J2iNir (1: Sotlhampton and delayed her de-
! !I 7!!7!: t 7777!!!n- :Es 10!!:e1 d i r pzure for home
t'' The 53000 tun 1ner suffered only
t : Rt'cAill " Y t ftioniy sul-e:d'icial damage Seven tugs
! e "1 !g h(ov Vutht to get the vessel away from
t f whee the per but finally had to give up
z"! e 111 stlate43' — 11:1'-en '-13 bcrlise of the high wind
- 8 nu
STRINGS :'(' IlL1 or e ' rt'T 111C“ Arl!lur s announcement that he Lad
1 The liner was leaving for Le
11Av cn a chilri be IR lped unl ih-4 'rustic to it wlcre they 1 a nan to end the Korean war wz - Havre and then New York but as
to gtin independem e gt ad- hovc a :celim2 oil nlicrouly
an '''1"Yect to Etstmit"w'r abt-'"rd ll— the lines were cast off the star-
tialkv? What may result of an ttitude thot "No one likes us ci Heena 112 WaS skePtIcaL L" board bridge wing on which Capt
ovil'IY-olencndent and pro- "otke! prplc think they are bet- ddn't yant to give the puLlic the John Anderson was standing
cuted child is suddenly cut 1 than v(! al-e" can you expect impression he wasn't open to any struck two giant cranes For a
off from prentiit guidance children Loin these two homes to and all ideas re Korea Sawa rnoinont the United States was
and ontiol? Discuss: A sue- cot tho sane V a I ties from their
of the people around him were caught in a tangle of steel
eesslut Parent hecumes an Un- SI 11(1°1 (''' eriunces7 And so it Ls much harsher in their reaction to- A IA A it
needed pdent M' n W ne Xper
r el etle eS OULsitle
w a r d MacArthur called t-im ni-kr11411:
Chthiren grow sI-)wly it takcs the !wino Aport from the found- ebildism
At the Seoul milt- New GOP Governor
yews for a child to become a rnan tion IA hich is laid there the fom- taty talks most sobering warn
Hawaii Republicans are getting
oe woman During those yeirs ily can influence to a very decid-
ing came from the air force Na- ready for the day when for the
L'Very aid known to science is c(i i!cgrt‘e how childi-en meet Cit-
tare of the warnings cannot be first time since March 1934 the
used to help children develop ' uot ions szind the directions m revealed for security reasons in territory will have a Republican
13 ertz 11- 4i 1-lii inccaTtuition hit-li 'hov ccrovc
II
Dates m ItiN iltLIN k kitt a L "4 "
office a time et Iwo a rancher tin t titnt3 have at thind information hich 'hey grow -- ------ --" ---" --- -- territory will nave a itepuoncan
thav were such that Eisorhow-i
the side: and when he dlought ititenI 1I value of cataltrato liat I It is (I:filet:It to "cut the ayron ti b t - " governor
frtah iir rel:ixaGln anI axercio :trinL'S" if one may use a worn- epvtt)lanolyynasn t ding up his rinna Hawaii's governor is appointed
a church needed neouragement' regar in Untie Korea-
iiitt Medical saienee has talen I n g oit eay:esaion It is not easy for s i by the president and in turn ap-
why thunderinlightenin' hi ii It looks almost car
--aal''S In a evcntin-- t --als a - a - — — -
tore up the checks the folks the t a 1otat to it Lan n om 1101 ong tain aiascitit v 1 points the heads of tile various ter
bilks gave him no his piiachiii i helping clultiren to ovelcoine 3 an-aill cLII's hani the f irst time u Nutoi ri jirri ot k-er c‘111Ilmask tha ritorial departments
ihscaps Schools kilOW 1 11 re a - he t ret one e s croascs he ste td Sh t Gov Oren E Long a Democrat
salary! Al his houae chl en i
they "hatch- I tionalist di i uns
vsl' :)1 '-' -' a
ea our smi miody fine nhitdit hoot teaching id: ns t i f l f t t o Ja o tearfu o wkii rL:gli happen wiir one to 'tic 1(1 1m th ci '''''''
I w ho Ic(:tme : hoolte:Ichers titneet the p Y1 0 i
y i 011 nse fr is lid it i
s erniiip y iipiaau oI r
lt to peri has announced he will submit his
ittliets4 t iGe e nb e Ili ilt12dkt l'cilt
t)‘1aflarktinit‘:1-1:ili:II:r11112 reaSilnatiOn on Eisenhower's inaug-
iind °they m421tit pvticesitins He :their fonds p ernot teacher s and oo t chil1:on to de velop new ire- uri-dien to take effect at the new
Presalent's pleasure
ytiistinlfacilittes for a wide vai-lety of ex- clopaa and independence in re- wantcad it use trooa3 taala
fiund time to heaome a aa:
arough which chltdren Hrti ht other :ecisiona And yet Form"ai argiid thitt it wa's' a il-i Halvaii's last Republican goy-
ad g3v a th e m sona lee-In:VS ':I'P111 ' I? i'n'-''''' '
1 lw0 t a 1 r n L oN e retrInlorreLdal:yenpeerersIiaeJltlitddn
1 rn Communities thaoua 1 ehat will h a -ien vl 1- r- -
o"O as se not
n
tina"to one to Lt: tlo Ndtt TII IOd
thrir vat ions aveneies zilso tlrtalp k-irotected child does kave hia faze i i i chief ohjec tio tiiiIsi
un-tii' Iklarch 1934
'Tilly" e ncour aged "vottra true- i -1 -
iv" hy callm' fir me -to conduct 1 i '11" n" e tr L'I
'stY "'lti'-':'11" nl e----t'' t"he a itIh to go to col- Chiar a' s troo p it l
s was 37
do that is if they have an ' hat'? IS it not better to let him British hut it was aa:0- ti:i A movement is: under way for
11itili(entiel‘i‘l:tiiA1:veiLlit t(-0IkI:111ruIllsa:lsa111-11'el 1111t1-1?ttrrst:inding alert awakened ntihe las e: r-rs in judgment when hevcd the British would ao aliina King the appointment of Samuel Wilder
iefa41 idea is handled diplarhati
young and whatever he ee- 65 for the governor He
ship
is Hawaii-born and has a quarter
called me over to Ilantford fer a tilnlielil'11'Illiliu‘it-1til‘NI:ililig-itotothirsmt 1°111(21!''1i2's will cause Inthe if no harm?
II a w a i i 'in b laeiooiNadnne awHlethenEiotelisfsgts1 aaenaxnddeder )sacettlealdnirnalliygs
revival We have a heap of "ex- -
Ihrough these years of tic elop-ille no:st lea:n to chooae his Li-
periences" to talk about Some
aas:IrctttalecurttshHofrraio:my
:tient chilaren of the community ends to spend II money to keep 1 PI trthassador
startlin'l with the same opportunities vary I in cond:tion far tt ie ob 'it hand It looks like fiery redheaded
in the degree to which they take ! to get viola- witl j le' Can he Aim Arthur Radford commander
graduate hir saattdo urpai cevaat aryencti ataidinanoencfsmiod9m:t:s4hmaceHnilaek:utdtshrieleafIrisiiictihi egedniipierieedieal isrtfI:aralso s: la el)as
"Billy" helped build schools and
just z-a they I lea! n to ti: this'lifP7P ' - - ' '
"preitche r c olleges" in his active ativiiol ogn a them soiie one co n- of he US fleet in the P citc t a
in the way they develoHinues to tall him a tat to do has talked himself into a potent
tlitys and is still inteicsted in Ivifty
"preacher colleges" where they 1 ph11 InenUilly ':- ni ittrillv N‘k-lhz(tt to buy xt hat frien-is to have position with the President-Elect
still believe the Bible to be the --ot:iilly A large shar'e'(lif the:Jct:7s b:111n ttk)tg) tt:01)(eicol the vhch3n'n totakeds e a l'lost navy men have been du- NI illeae vtanelan
1 1al ad of bious about EiysenfhloL‘tr'es
figured for this varial ion' 1
towaid the nay stiaed during World War II leav
1 word of Gott Almighty! And Pm 1ponsibitity
Itn the home It is there that the thipas Npelo'11)11e n t t n to do
ing the navy with the rank of cap
athgat'lltni'let'ld71ilief t L1'11:111IlitliNl'uilS ilti11 1111'111On foundati on is bid that attitudes 1nt' need not ii':ee11ith the oft- life in army man he would favor
taiisiliciellegahteastosecno'endgress
t several teams
t a i tt ptat
sa0112tnt hot th success- e succata sue- his oNn branch i
1 t hat I got an invitat ion :Z-oni a I are tievelopedi I h fi I:t a f ) I t t :: ' ' -
Admiral I college to come over una :2ive I or against someone' or some! hm1 ceasful pal ent becomes an Ian- 1 Ha
it Another possibility is Lt Con
Raifard scheduled to see Eisen-
htir chiss of "young r
peacher s " Ili t iat tt t i -
a 3 ill lap la pi emuceri ii e needed pa: ent tai - I
becomes eas i liover for exactly one hour at I'xo ai rticrLiir7!:SetirtAdur axiTIrld) istnnotterdenSteeds
1 "trettise" on ovangehsin! evelvtat It is there alao tlr it a ful parent certainly
c'f ' ttOTh00(11 needed as the child becomes mor e! Jima staved on for the entire
''11111ili'lliglYtt'l‘i‘es stages of childhood and more self-reliant Tie ontin- trip Eisen
t I hower's stop at IWO was
11(v1I1:11::irslt i:111‘Illi:1k7i i22' f t i 1Is:1:1111s1:tit)y)1:spKeIti 1:11(119111511 n ) t I out 1
In cIS aL)11- 1 nes to need his paaents all his Fifa' 1 to refoel and give the Pl-es:Lint- n business m —onoadu Ile is a
Lo i:-- I cut in wilevent ways porsonal friend and classmate of
: Elect a chance to stretch hi I
: foreman and Bill Hoge Tulaa ! it' totiiitdtItilaTi--etiiti"t:iintii
There Admiral Radford met him
and at the end of one ham's talk
adth Rad lard Ike can Laek to
ins plane and asked the pilot:
"Ca Mt we make room for the
Si Radford went along Further
he had such a iii Eis
enhower that he persuaded him to
revamp his schedule and stop off
at Radford s guest house in
Hawaii
The cruise on the Helena had
been arranged well before Eisen-
hower left the U S A but the stop-
over in Hawaii was not on the
schedule Original plans called for
Eisenhower's departure by air
from Hawaii immediately after the
Helena docked However Admiral
Radford has so ingratiated him-
self ‘vith the President-Elect by
this time that arrangements were
changed
Actually no military strategy
was discussed at Hawaii The
President - Elect golfed and re-
laxed There were no conferences
except for sessions held by Her-
bert Brownell and Secretary of the
Interior-to-be McKay who inter-
viewed candidates for governor of
Hawaii
"Wanted -
ti
—g 1 Parachute
00 1 At
veoF Once"
FOR
ANYTHING
YOU NEW
My OUR WANT ADS
King 65 for the governorship He
is Hawaii-born and has a quarter
Hawaiian blood He is a descend-
ant of Hawaiian chiefs and early
settlers front New England and is
an authority on almost everything
that pertains to Hawaii political
historical and scientific He is a
graduate of the United States
Naval academy and resigned from
the navy in 1924 with the rank '1
lieutenant commander He also
served during World War II leav-
ing the navy with the rank of cap-
tain He has served several teoms
as delegate to Congress
Another possibility is Lt Con
Henry S Aurand United Soles
army retired who is now engaged
in business in Honolulu Ile is a
porsonal friend and classmate of
General Eisenhower However he
may be ineligible because al-
though he has lived in Hawaii
more than the reouired three
years most of the time he was
commanding general of the army
in the Pacific Military service in
a community is not usually con-
sidered legal residence
GERHART EISLER:
Undcr Fire
Gorhart Eisler who fled the
United States to escape prosecto
tion and became a big figure in
Communist East German politics
has been blamed for failure of
Soviet zone propaganda and may
be ousted from his post as chief of
the information office
The criticisms came from Wil-
helm Koenen chairman of the
Communist-run National Front and
Hermann Axen chief of the Com-
munist partys agitation depart-
ment at a meeting of the party
central committee
KOellen told the committee of
which Eisler is not a member that
despite huge expenditures Eisler
has succeeded only in producing a
"completely flabby campaign"
Axon demanded a "basic change
in the work of the information offce"
TUESDAY JANUARY 13 1933
I
SCANNING
"Two Old Friends u 1 THE NEWS —
i
4
Ike and Mac
rA a
'4"'g'''''L :40-110401'7 4
t '' - - -
- -
4 I For the first time in six years
President-Elect Eisenhower saw
his old commander General Mac-
'' Arthur when they met for lunch
i and talks on "peace in Korea and
: ! the World" at the New York City
home of John Foster Dulles Eis-
'4 t
i enhower's secretary of state desig-
7 rate
11 The two hour and 15 minute
meeting ended as Eisenhower and
0
: MacArthur em er ged smiling
'''' through the iron grilled door of the
white stone mansion
Eisenhower's statement to the
press was "I just had a meeting
with two old and very good friends
my old commander and the sec-
retary of state designate
''We had a very enjoyable lunch
and very fine conversation on the
general subject of peace not only
in Korea but throughout the world
with particular reference to the
world situation in which of course
such a Korean peace would have to
be determined
"I hope my old commander will
re have a word t) say"
ie General MacArthur had been
a standing by his right hand hooked
o through Eisenhower's left arm He
ts disengaged his hand and stepped
le over to the newsmen
Id I "I had a very pleasant reunion
d- with the President-Elect It was a
resumption of an old friendship
ps and comradeship of 35 years stand-
s ing The subject was peace in Ko-
2d rea and the vorld in general"
at MacArthur said
o As he left Eisenhower said "I
certainly hope it isn't another six
se 3-ears before we meet again"
m The meeting was brought about
se by MacArthur's statement in a
IS speech to the National Association
?r- of Manufacturers that there was a
n "clear solution" to the war in Ko-
rea Eisenhower homeward bound
from Korea radioed from the
cruiser Helena that he wanted the
g-
Unefit of l'alacArthur's "thinking
er
and experience"
President Truman said in a press
le-at cot iference that Eisenhower's cam-
paign pledge of a trip to Korea was
demagoguery Ile also said he re-
lly
ceived m:smforreatlon from Mac-
gs 1 ArthIll When he saw him at Wake
n
' island Immediately following that
up meeting Truman dismissed Mac-
L Arthur
e
1k'hile the meeting was going on
as
Eisenhower's headquarters in the
ir-
Commodore hotel announced that
pt
he would shortly meet with Repub-
ig lic a n Representatives Martin
a (Mass) Halleck (Ind) and Arends
as
(ED
Announcement
We Have Purchased
END DOLLAR AID:
Says Secretary Sawyer
Secretary of Commerce Sawyer
who headed a presidential mission
to Europe has recommended the
ending of American dollar aid to
Europe This refers to the Marshall
plan and the current mutual se-
curity program for economic pur-
poses Sawyer told President Truman
this country's most important con-
cern should be to keep America
prosperous lie made four points
in his statement:
I There was an almost unani-
mous opinion that the United States
has too many people and too many
agencies in western Europe
2 A new look should be taken
at the present handling and trend
of the Point Four program be-
cause it is tending to become an-
other give-away agency
3 It is clear the solution of Eu-
rope's economic problems lies not
in the United States but in West-
ern Europe
4 This country should not con-
tinue to supply economic aid un-
der the guise of military aid
"In every country we visited"
the mission's report said "Condi-
tions were better rather than worse
than we had expected
"Permanent strength and sta-
bility for the western European
allies do not lie in continuing Unit-
ed States subsidies and grants but
in expanding production and trade
Shown is Ernest Corns 22
of Glassport Pa who dis-
armed a live bomb with a 60-
second fuse which had lodged
in the bomb bay of his B-29 as
the plane returned to Okinawa
from a mission over Korea
ft took him exactly 28 seconds
to disarm the missile which
would have blown the plane
apart
ESTELLE'S STYLE SHOP
505 So Boulevard
Our Formal Opening Will Soon Be Announced
ALICE ROBERTS
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Dobyns, Frank L., Jr. The Edmond Enterprise (Edmond, Okla.), Vol. 52, No. 1, Ed. 1 Tuesday, January 13, 1953, newspaper, January 13, 1953; Edmond, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2054738/m1/6/: accessed July 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.