The Alva Review-Courier (Alva, Okla.), Vol. 54, No. 124, Ed. 1 Tuesday, February 10, 1953 Page: 4 of 6
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Page 4—Alva (Okla) Review-Courier Tuesday Feb 10 1953
puminnim
THE REVIEW PUBLISHING CO Inc
616 Flynn Avenue Alva Oklahoma
Publishers of
Alva Review-Courier
Est Sept 16 1803
Published Daily except Saturday
and Sunday morning
Fat May 1000
Lnd Sunday morning
PlIblished Each Thuraday
TWO INDEPENDENT HOMETOWN NEWSPAPERS
Each Publication entered as second clads mall matter at the pontoffice
in Alva Oklahoma under act of March 5 1879 od each regular publics-
cation date and frequency
TELEPHONES FOR ALL DEPARTMENTS-400 AND 201
BROOKS H BICKNELL Editor and Publisher
' Business Office Hours
8:30 AM to 5 PM Daily
— Advertising Dept Hours 8 A M to 5 PM Daily
News Department Hours 8 AM to 5 PM Daily
Circulation Dept Hours 3 P M to I P M Daily
z—
National Adv Representative
souTwEsT DAILIES INO
s Dallas New York Oklapoma City
Detroit and Kansas City
1950-51 Oklahoma SweepstAke3 Winning Daily
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Mall in
Weeds and Adjoining
Counties:
One Year $588 plue 12 tax ---$600
Six Montlis $310 plus 0C tax $310
Three Months $180 plus 04 tax $184
By Mail in Oklahoma
One Year $110 plus 14 tax Mil
Six Months 8445 plus 09 tax $454
SUBSCRIPTION RAS FOR WEEKLY RECORD
One Year by Mall In Wog& One rear 137 Mall abwher--
and adiattant ownmtIes - $50 Oklanomn and other &tater'
EVSON IN WASHINGTON
Ike's Top Foreign Policy Move
Was Pledged in GOP Hallam
BY PETER EDSON
amogrammenamuioner !Ir10117"PPIVAINPISCPArirlINSETW
Tennessee Waltz
HORIZONTAL
1 Tennessee's
nickname is
the "Volunteer
6 Nash— is
the capital of
Tennessee
11 Fondle
13 Motion
pictures
14 Take into
custody
15 Russian
storehouses
16 Genus of
cattle
17 Bird of prey
19 Compass point
20 Forays
22 Short jacket
25 Abstract being
28 Small island
30 Pauses
32 Arabian
prince
33 Mortise
34 Bridges
35 Diminutive of
Stanley
36 Dolt
39 Royal Italian
family name
40 Separate twins
43 Oriental porgy
46 Chemical
- compound
- 47 British money
of account
- 50 Type of fur
52 Beast
4 vb
54 Conductor
55 Expand
56 More halt
::4 57 Goddess of
growing
v"'""— vegetation
VERTICAL
1 Incrustation
on a sore
2 Edible
rootstock
3 Arrivals (ab)
4 Golfer's
device
5 City in
Germany
6 Balloted
7 Yellow bugle
plant
8 Parts of the
mouth
9 Dregs
10 Essential
being
12 Fixed look
13 Turkish
prayer rug
18 Annamese
measure
20 Mean
21 Smirk
22 Goddess of
discord
The
Alva Weekly Record
OICLA30M4 PRESS
ASSOCIATION
MEMBER-1952
FOR REVIEW-COURIER
By City Carrier
In Alva Only In advance:
One Denali $100
Six Months $575
One Year $1100
Si Mall Outside Oklahoma -
One Year $765 plus 16 tax $781
Six Months $485 Li US 10
qZ
I
BY PETER EDSON ''f14tV Et
NEA Washington Correspondent
WASHINGTON—(NEA)—President Eisenhower's most important
" foreign policy declaration in his message to Congress is worth a
second look This is his proposal for a congressional resolution stating
that the U S government recognizes no secret treaty corninitmt-mts
for "the enslavement of any people" to purchase "fancied gain for
ourselves"
The entire foreign-policy section of the President's message was
cleared with Secretary of State John Foster Dulles before he went
to Europe But the important thing to know about this proposed
congressional foreign policy resolution is what roots it stems from
and what it is likely to grow into
In its broadest interpretation the congressional declaration against
the enslavement of any people might become a global emancipation
' proclamation—a promise to free the slaves of Communism all over
the world While that is a noble intent any nation that set out to
liberate all the people enslaved by Communism would probably end
up with a world war on its hands
The resolution which President Eisenhower proposes would prob-
ably not go that far however At best it would more likely be a
partial repudiation of agreements made by Presidents Roosevelt and
Truman at Yalta and Potsdam as they applied to Poland East Ger-
many Korea and the northern Japanese islands
-
THIS movement for repudiation of the Yalta agreement in particular
is not just a new trick pulled out of President Eisenhower's
Homburg A pledge to repudiate the Yalta agreement is found in the
Republican platform adopted at Chicago last June It says:
'The government of the United States under Republican leader-
ship will repudiate all commitments contained in secret understand-
ings such as those at Yalta which aid Communist enslavement It
will make clear on the highest authority of the President and the
"- Congress that United States policy as one of its peaceful purposes
' looks happily forward to the genuine independence of those cap-
tive peoples"
it During the campaign Candidate Eisenhower referred to this matter
several times So in now asking Congress for new resolutions and
' - 1' declarations on foreign policy President Eisenhower is merely car
vying out the Republican platform and his own campaign pledges
THE main agreement at Teheran in 1943 was that the U S and
Britain would attack Germany through France in 1944
At Yalta in February 1945 agreement was reached on the San
Francisco conference to draft a United Nations charter The U S
and Britain agreed to support White Russia and the Ukraine as
separate countries in the UN The three major powers agreed to
- ' take steps to prevent future German aggression including repara
- 'ions and even dismemberment of Germany Russia agreed to enter
the war against Japan on condition the USSR be given the Kurile
islands plus rail and port rights in Manchuria Russia also agreed
- to support Nationalist China
At Potsdam in August 1945 the principles for postwar govern-
ment of Germany were agreed to It was decided Austria should
pay no reparations Withdrawal of Allied troops from Iran was
arranged Provisions for peace treaties with Italy Finland Hungary
Rumania and Bulgaria were outlined
The full texts of these agreements were not made public until
March 1947 If Russia had lived up to all its commitments in
these conferences the world situation today would be entirely
different The fact that Russia has not lived up to its promises Is
in itself considered by many as basis enough for nullification
Answer to Previous Puzzle
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24 Bones 42 Type of
27 Bodies of architecture
water 43 Relate
28 Church fast 44 Extert
season 45 Mohammedan
29 Gaelic priest
31 Street (ab) 47 Persian
32 Electrical unit tentmaker
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Your Nichol's
Worth
I By HARMAN W NICHOLS
WASHINGTON Feb 10—UP---In
the offices or most U S Senators
the unsung hero generally is the
administrative assistant
Such a man Is John L Erickson
the good right arm of Sen James
William Fulbright Arkansas Dem-
ocrat The affable John and a staff of
six other helpers—all from Arkan-
sas—keep busy day after day
"When you get to know a sena-
tor as well as we know ours" says
Erickson "it isn't too difficult For
example we open all of the hun-
dreds of letters which come in from
constituents And when they come
to town we glad-hand them We
know that Sen Fulbright wants
personally to read all the mail that
is opinionated He dictates a lot of
the answers himself"
Reputation of Straight Facts
The senator has the reputation of
appearing on the floor of the Sen-
ate only when he has all his facts
straight John and the others do
most of the digging
"Seldom if ever is the senator
caught with his facts sagging"
says John "He knows he could
make himself look pretty silly if he
were not well- coppered"
Fit !bright himself is one of the
best educated men on Capitol Hill
was a Rhodes scholar a Phi Beta
Kappa and has Peveral honorary
degrees
Fit !bright Educates Public
"The boss" says John "perhaps
has done more than any other per-
son to educate the public to the
fact that all people from Arkansas
are not shoeless hill people We
get letters from native Arkansans
from all over the world Someone
will sneer 'Who from Arkansas
ever amounted to anything' Invari-
ably some non-native of our state
will non up with 'Senator Ful-
bright'" Some of the mail coming into the
Fulbright offices—like mail that
comes to other senators—is on the
crackpot side One voter wrote
recently and claimed he had in-
vented the A-bomb "and why did
I not get credit for it?"
Another asked he senator why
the government didn't look into the
possibility of perfecting a hydrogen
bomb
A grade school girl sent in this
note:
Good Cook Book
"My teacher said if I would write
you you would send me a very
good cook book I am and please
do"
John did
When day is done the 32-year-old
Erickson takes a bus to Alexandria
Va to spend a little leisure with
his wife and three children—one
boy and two girls Gunnar 6 Kar-
en 5 and Kirstin 1
His hobby is fixing up their play
room to resemble a miniature
"ranch" On the outside their
daddy has tacked up a metal
"brand" It is 3-E—for three small
Ericksons
When he wants to relax what do
you think John does to amuse him-
self and his kids? He goes into his
work shop and designs wooden to-
tem poles
Housewives Like
39-Cent Steaks
COLUMBUS Feb 10---UP—Bar1?ain
hunters lined up early Tues-
day for more imported 39-cent T-
bone steaks and 23-cent ground
beef from New Zealand which the
Metz supermarket put on display
Manager Louis MeClarren said
he was busy all Monday night cut-
ting up what few pieces he had left
from Monday's buying stampede
and thawing out a new shipment
from a Chicago packing house
The imported beef went on sale
for the first time Sunday morning
and was sold out within a few
hours Monday a small shipment
arrived and it was likewise gone
soon after the store opened
MeClarren said the T-bone sup-
ply was gone in three hours but
People kept right on calling up and
walking in to try and get some of
the half-price meat He said even
the 23-eent ground beef was snap-
ped up as housewives eagerly
sought to add more meat to their
tables and still keep within their
budgets
Hundreds of persons including
several from a bordering state
have been on hand for the sale
Let Your Watch Serve
You Longer and More
Dependably
Have It Properly Serviced
By An Export Craftsman
ALL WATCHES TESTED
ELECTRONICALLY BEFORE
AND AFTER REPAIR ON
a A WATCHMASTER
Accttrote to 1 '000th of 1
GUARANTEED WORK
PROMPT SERVICE
Free Pic Imp and Delivery
Phone 723
J L BOSTICK
1127 SANTA FE
L471-51wirz
lits wiNITER
i
klE5SR1Ø4-"Tr-le VERY
TIR5114iN I'M Oti-lcz To
PO- iF I'M tLELTEP- 15 To
KN4a-K1i-I5 44164-7A 1 4
?R051M INTO A COCKs7
'HAT- -c)i-IELTPNV 0-1
ItA WM 1141
(kk
which started Sunday morning
"Some of them bought a pound
and others bought a whole side of
the beef weighing more than 400
pounds" Mc Marren said "I could
sell a million pounds if I could get
IL"
The butcher said he placed no
limit on the amount of a purchase
and sold it on a first-come first
Circumstances Alter Cases
NO 5-THE HUMBLE OFFICE
In April 1837 Abraham Lincoln left New Salem fo Springfield
to be a partner in the low firm of John T Stuart whom he met
while serving in the Black Hawk War Their law practice flourished
and by July 1837 they had a dozen more legal cases Oa tier
nearest competitor The law office on the second floor of Hottmon's
Row was sparsely furnished and had a bed on the right side As
the first floor of the building was the home of the Sangamon Coonty
Circuit Court the Lincolo-Stuar: kw office was ftequently used as
0 jury room
i
"Did you know there are sixteen beet
railroad systems with lines here horn
in Oklahoma?" asked Blackie frei
Hicks our railroad station agent 491
"And these lines go into 78 out of pi
our 77 counties havl
"When you see those big Diesels gro
pulling a string of freight call bus'
several blocks long just remem- chas
ber it's the freight we carry that such
helps us to give you good passen- buil(
ger service
"Just to give you some idea of
what the freight business
amounts to" Black's said the
secd basis
bought about
New Zealand
He said the market
7000 pounds of the
beef from its regular
dealer Swift and Co ) which was
aII gone by the first day
The market sold chuck roast at
! 25 cents alio 'rib roast at 29 cents
!It addition to tile low-priced T-
1 bones and ground beef
Advertisement
00kinglover Oklahoma
NEMEnniSMORPOOd006100&
by Joe Marsh
7' Beer and Railroad Freight
beer industry alone here hi Okla-
homa pays the railroads for
freight hauling more than
1900000 a year on an average"
From where I sit the railroads
have been a big factor in the
growth of our state and the beer
business too through its pur
chases of aupplies and services
such as freight service is helping
build Oklahoma
0 1953 U S BREWERS FOUNDATION OKLAHOMA DIVISION
1304 First National Bldg Oklahoma City
lo4ikZ:'::::
ON 4E(0141
-THOLIHT- MERE
WE 4-1AVNT
OLJGHTA BE
-Ito 4-IA415iwRATF
'll
'4- AM
Obituary
HAROLD NELSON
Harold Nelson son of Nels and
Marn Nelson was born in Denmark
June 26 1902 and departed this life
Feb 3 1953 at the age of 50 years
9 months and 10 days in the Uni-
versity hospital Oklahoma City
Okla
He came to the United States in
May of 1923 and resided at Alice
Tex
Harold has been in the upholster-
ing business at Elk City
Okla for a numuer of years
Survivors are: two brothers and
one sister in Denmark and two
aunts in the United States
CARD OF TRANKS
We are sincerely gt ateful to
friends for their sympathy during
our breavement — The family
of Harold Nelson
VUMMM
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P EXPERT DIGESTS TODAY'S REPOKT—
Fanning s the Foreign Fron
By PHIL NEWSOM
United Press Foreign Analyst
Some members of congress and
a great many Europeans are ask-
ing three main questions aboyt
President Eisenhower's order free-
ing Chiang Kai-Shek's troops for
attacks on Red China
They are:
Where can 'Chiang attack the
mainland with any profit to the
United Nations?
What will the Reds do in retalia-
tion? What will the United States do?
Prime Minister Winston Church-
ill stated Europe's position when
he said there are worse things than I
stalemate in Korea and that Eu-
rope remains the "center of gray-
ity in the world fight against com-
munism Eisenhower's Reply
General Eisenhower's reply is I
found in his assertion that tern-
peramentally the United States I
cannot remain indefinitely in a
state of paralysis
It seems confirmed now that the
President's action lifting For-
mosa's enforced "neutrality" was
psychological in nature and also
involved a deliberate calculated
risk
Of the whole China mainland
probably the least suitable for any
large-scale invasion is that direct-
ly opposite Formosa
The port of Amoy 217 miles from
Taipeh is a splendid port with no
railway connection to any other
part of China 1
Swatow another fine port about
150 miles below Amoy has only a
road connection with the rest of
China Bridges were destroyed by
the retreating Nationalists years
ago and it is a three-day coolie
walk to the nearest railroad
All other ports anywhere close
are tidal and unsuitable for vessels
of any size
Around Amoy all the way north
to the Yangtze and inland more
than 400 miles to the Changsha
rice bowl the country is complete-
ly agricultural In all their years
of fighting in China the Japanese
for example never bothered with
the area except for occasional raids
either to collect or to destroy rice
No Place on Amoy
So even if Chiang's forces were
able to land at Amoy there would
be no place for them to go so far
as conquering the rest of China is
concerned
Chiang might strike the mainland
by air But as of now he has no
Jet aircraft and his entire airforce
Including transports is believed to
number no more than 750 He
might however strike Red China's
vital north-south rail line where it
veers into Shanghai or he might
even try for selected targets in
Manchuria Red China's industrial
roy:ses etorialvo Aver
4' v (4°4 "2
a 41-r-7r7 04
::: t- ift-7
t‘'Ir446 6 "1
16 la
-r
An automatic clothes dryer
is kind to your clothes
Wind and weather "hurt" clothes more than wear—
and lady that hurts your budget!
A clothes-saving automatic dryer is gentle
shields washings from outdoor dust dirt and smoke
ends drudgery at the clothesline
lets you pick and choose your washdays too
Come in for a demonstration soon!
OKLAHOMA GAS AND ELECTRIC COMPANY
Serving Dependable Electricity Since 1902
Mt
I
heart
But Formosa on137 200 mile n
dn
and less than an hour's flyin Woe
away is Just as open to attack aA
the mainland and is a much more
concentrated target
Any attack on Formosa Just AS
any attack on Japan would seem
certain to involve the United
States
Therein lies Europe's fears and
the calculated risk
The next Ti S step probably will
be dependent on what the Reds do
But it seems increasingly clear
that the course of "positive" for-
eign policy calls for no turning
back
I
So THAT YOU AND
YOUR LOVED ONES MAY
HAVE
the
best
care
money
can
buy
when
POLIO CANCER LEUKEM-
IA SMALLPDX DIPTHERIA
SCARLET FEVER SPINAL
MENINGITIS or TETANUS
STRIKES
FAMILY POLICY $1200
Annually
Kent W Johnson
& Sons
"Insurance Is Our Business
Not a Sideline"
ALVA OKLAHOMA
ONE DAY '-
SERVICE
on All
I Dry Cleaning
HUB CLEANERS
1 On U S 64 Highway
TELEPHONE 15
7:5
7
o''71
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1304 First National Bldg Oklahoma City '
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is kind to your clothes ti
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' :::::q A clothes-saving automatic dryer is gentle
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'shields washings from outdoor dust dirt and smoke : : 'I
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ends drudgery
tsyou pi ck o and tchheooclothesline
Beyour w
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Come in for a demonstration a n!
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Dr: OKLAHOMA GAS AND ELECTRIC COMPANY f '-' k
1111 Serving Dependable Electricity Since 1902 Y '1 7
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Obituar)
rz Ltp GO LI GO u xgrAve
'
11 0 emcpota bo one
71—
HAROLD NELSON
1 Harold Nelson son of I
s
1Marn Nelson was born in t
sok 1' 40 i June 26 190'2 and departed
4 4'' 1Feb 3 1953 at the age of f
o 441' 19 months and 10 days in
"91s' ' I verity hospital Oklahon
I
i Okla
1 1 He came to the United !
- 7 -- May of 1923 and resided i
41 Tex
Harold has been in the u
Mg business at Elk
Okla for a numner of yea
) Survivors are: two brotl
one sister in Denmark
- aunts in the United States
CARD OF MANIC
We are sincerely gt a
friends for their sympath
our breavement — Thi
' A
of Harold Nelson
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Bicknell, Brooks H. The Alva Review-Courier (Alva, Okla.), Vol. 54, No. 124, Ed. 1 Tuesday, February 10, 1953, newspaper, February 10, 1953; Alva, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2064000/m1/4/?q=War+of+the+Rebellion.: accessed June 28, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.