Okemah Daily Leader (Okemah, Okla.), Vol. 31, No. 260, Ed. 1 Sunday, November 25, 1956 Page: 4 of 6
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- 4
1
PAGE TOLTI
OKEMAH DAILY LEADER
W G Strong Publisher
J W Strong Editor at Assl Pub
H C Neal News Editor
The Associated Press is exclusive-
ly entitled to the use of republica-
tion of all the news dispatches
credited by this paper and also to
all the local news therein AU rights
of publications of special dispatches
herein also are reserved
elattle
'
K OM r1tH971
National Adv Representatives
SOUTHWEST DAILIES
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By carrier: per week 20c Per mo
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MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS MUST BE
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adj counties by mail 6 mo $250
year $375
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Coastal States-1 yr $750
end 3rd 4tb tone-mo 70c
No subscription taken for less than
8 months
Vte MINER
poll TODAY FROM
tbe Upper goome
Behold the kingdom of God is
within you (Luke 17:21)
PRAYER: 0 God help us to
keep within our hearts an aware-
ness of the kingdom of Thy love
May it hold us steady when all
else totters and falls Help us to
be true diFciples of Christ in all
things through His precious spirit
Amen
PROOF POSITIVE
RHINELANDER Wis (R—A boy
accused of trying to steal a tape
recording machine was arrested
In a department store here He
denied the charge but police turn-
ed on the recorder and heard the
youngster's voice saying "I guess
I'll steal this machine"
Sales & Service
NEW MACHINES
IN STOCK
BILL
LOWRIM ORE'S
Phone 573
New Location Will Be
Announced Soon
PLUMBING
Call 23 or 307
Axel knimmNitoma aaminormimawtoolotommomff
Editorial
I THE LIMITATIONS OF WORDS
By Bruce Biossat
In some circles in the United
States there seems today to be an
uncommon faith in the power of
words to order the affairs of a
troubled world
No one would question for an
instant that this country ought to
use the full weight of its authoriy
as a powerful land to speak out
!for peace for international mor
Publibuem uaus except oaturday ality for justice in the world
or Monday by the Okemah Pub- Many times we use our voic
hailing Co 419 West Broadway we should Undoubtedly there
Okemah Okla Phone 620 times when we do not But we I
Entered as second class matter to remember that however 1
daily except Sat & Mon at the we may loom on the world hori
postoffice at OkemalL Okla under there are things we cannot b
Act fif March 3 1879 about merely by uttering word
Many times we use our voice as
we should Undoubtedly there are
times when we do not But we have
to remember that however large
we may loom on the world horizon
there are things we cannot bring
about merely by uttering words
It has been said for instance
that the !hafted States could have
prevented any shipment of arms
to Egypt from the Soviet Union
merely by telling the Kremlin not
to do it
Is it really as simple as that?
Such a warning is only as ef-
fective as the stuff that backs it
up What were we prepared to do if
Russia ignored the warning as it
Very likely would have done?
We could not very well say we
would blockade the shipments for
that is an act of war which might
bring broad consequences We
could hardly threaten war itself
over such an issue We could have
said we would send equal arms to
Israel but this would have speed-
ed an arms race and the very sort
of divisions in the Middle East we
were trying to avoid
It is also being said that we will
not be doing our part until we
"insist" that Egypt and the Arab
lands sit down at the council table
and negotiate a genuine peace with
Israel
Again s that all there is to it?
Suppose the Arab peoples refuse
Then what do we do? We can em-
barrass them with all kinds of pub-
lic censure but we cannot compel
them to negotiate if they do not
wish to We could of course take
them over and negotiate in their
stead but that hardly seems a for-
mula for lasting Middle Eastern
peace
It is understandable when criti-
cal situations arise that there be
a demand for action and strong
words—or words alone if acion is
not possible But we have to face
the fact that there are situations
for which no words are ruly ade-
quae and the only really effective
action is war
People who argue as if words
cotild blow down the Kremlin walls
are not facing the brutal facts in a
tough world
I Trinity Church on Broadway and
Wall Street in New York City is
! said to have the most valuable
!piece of graveyard property in the
a world Here many historical not
ables including Alexander Hamil-
1 ton and Robert Fulton are buried
—
1it
zae -21
MEDICAL STOCKPILE in the Federal Civil Defense Administra-
tion warehouse in Marshall Mich is typical of the 38 stores of
bulk medical supplies in the United States Each medical stock-
pile located 20 to 100 miles from major target cities is determined
by the tize of the adjacent target trcnA Photot
for FAMILIES
children frem I month top
end potent IS tkru 59
for INDIVIDUALS
ego kmite Ilihru 59
For full details cull or wrIfe e
STEPHENSON
INSURANCE
AGENCY
111 N 2nd Pho 75
teroesonting
REPAIR AND SERVICE
HEATING & AIR CONDITIONING
S & S STORE
i EDSON IN WASHINGTON
Filed Income Group
Seen Hurt by Rising Co-sts
New Farm Facts
More gross return may be ob-
tained from cotton by delaying
stripper harvesting until after frost
has defoliated the stalks
Tests have shown that cotton
stripped after frost with no prior
defoliation yielded more gross re-
turn per acre than did cotton de-
foliated and stripped before frost
—Research report of the Oklahoma
Agricultural Experiment station
Remington Royal Underwood
portable typewriters new and
ased Leader Office Supply
zZ"::
cr -
BT PETER EDSON
NEA Washington Correspondent
i
WASHINGTON—(NEA)—The elections won't eettle everything!
" Perhaps the most important issue not solved by the roiinti
returns is the matter of creeping inflation I
Bethlehem Steel Corporation's Eugene G Grace admitted 10
clays before the election that his company was studying the need
for another incresse in the price of steeL '
' This increase would be on top of the $850 per too increase on
The average steel price announced just after the new labor contracti
was signed with United Steel Workers union July 27 e-- -
On Oct 4 the United Mine Workers won a one-year contract for
a package increase of 30 cents an hour—the largestincreaseinl
John L Lewis' history
I DIMEDIATELY thereafter coal prices began to climb This is
one of the factors—increased cost of raw materials—said to be
responsible for a further increase in steel prices -
There you have a perfect example of how one vicious little circle
of inflation gets closed
Higher steel prices mean higher automobile washing machine
and all other kinds of machinery prices That means that the things
the machines make soon cost more And pretty soon you have the
whole cost of living on the rise - -
i The last pre-election report on the consumers' price ex ort
— f
September showed an increase of 19 per cent in the last yearto
a new all-time high of 1171 per cent over 1947-49 averages' -el
IN AN OBVIOUS EFFORT to offset any bad effect this might
have Secy of Labor James P Mitchell issued a statement at the
'same time It said that in the past year there had been an increase
of about two per cent in the average industrial worker's take-home
pay—just as though that made everything all right
The figures given were that after deductions for income taxes
and social security the average industrial unmarried worker had
take-home pay of $66 a week while for a married man with two
children the average spendable income after taxes is $74 a week
Both figures are said to be about 6260 a week higher than a
year ago
This may look like prosperity but is it?
t Benjamin F Fairless retired board chairmanof US Steel Corp-I
pointed up this question in one short paragraph of his recent auto-
biographical series in Life Magazine:
1 The wage price spiral that has been going on since 1946 should
give union leaders some pause for thought A real increase in the
standard of living can come only from increased productivity Wage
raises that go beyond this have to come out of somebody's hide—
usually out of the hides of people with fixed incomes Just once
I would like to hear a union leader say that it might be better
for our nation the working man included if wages prices and
everything else stayed put for a while"
I THERE IS of course a warning here for the steel masters who
set prices es well as for the union leaders who demand wage in-
creases if the wage increases granted in recent contracts do come
out of increased productivity as IVIr Fairless says they should
President Eisenhower campaigned with "the stable dollar" as his
number one issue Gov Adlai Stevenson campaigned with heavy
critical emphasis on the rise in the cost of living He called inflation
"silent robbery" which is as good a name for it as any
One of the most important jobs of the new administration and
the new Congress as the active policemen on the beat—is to stop
it before it gets out of hand
f G6 Amosr M
EI14T O'CLOCK LARD
p DIDN'T WE HAVE A
4113 DATE TONIGAT?
-741
GRAYSON'S SCOREBOARD
L ''77 V" iRoadwork Toughest for
L ei jMoore and Robinson
(''11' --''- t- BY HARRY GRAYSON 111
I t-lent14) ''C 1
NEA Sports Editor
- t
N YORK—(NEA)Billy Graham was 34 when he went to
camp at Greenwood Lake NY to get ready for a fight
t He would hide in the morning so Whitey Bimstein the trainer )
wouldn't shove him out onto the road The long miles of running It
killed Graham's desire to fight
) It was the same for Jersey Joe Walcott It was a subtle tug of
war to get him on the road for his last couple of fights
‘ "It's too lonely" he insisted "All you have is the birds and
! crickets for company"
- Kid Gavilan was at Summit NJ before what amounted to his
last big effort a shot at Bobo Olson's middleweight title He com-
plained about his days being "always the same'
TIEN °nava (OKLA) DAILY LIAM
NOBODY IS AROUND to see a fighter do roadwork Few people
get up that early in the morning But nearly everybody in boxing
agrees it is the key to an old-timer
It is the key to how Archie Moore wiU do with Floyd Patterson
when they fight for the heavyweight title in Chicago Nov 30 It is
the same for Ray Robinson who defends his middleweight cham-
pionship against Gene Fullmer at Madison Square Garden Dec 12
N "Condition" Graham Insists "leas the story with an old 1
fighter If he's the kind of fellow who 'hasn't been abused
constantly—like Moore and Robinson—then be doesn't go in
one round or one fight Not if the guy is in shape Ile may
start sliding but it won't be all at once Not If he is out there
on the road
"The trouble is you can't get a guy to run' You start making
all kinds of excuses to yourself You say 'I can lick this guy easy'
Then you start stalling off running You get in the gymnasium
and start boxing and say 'I've had enough' after only a couple of
rounds you tell yourself that you're conserving energy
'YOU GET INTO the fight and the other fellow misses a punch'
You should counter But you say to yourself He missed me didn't
be? Why should I worry about not punching back? I'll tire my-
self out that way'
"People watching the guy fight say 'Ills reflexes are shot' It
: isn't his reflexes It isn't anything in the ring It's what he
' didn't do back in camp"
Moore is around 40 years of age Robinson is listed as 36 They
are at an age where a training camp's walls start to close in
The morning starts with a nagging distaste of what's coming up
If you do it the right way roadwork is a two-hour job You jog
stop shadow box sprint jog again You cover from fota to eight
miles You start it in chilly darkness these days and do it on an
empty stomach
THE YOUNG FIGHTER goes at training with a steady liking
Patterson only 21 can't find anything boring about roadwork It
means too much to him now It is the same with Fullmer
Rocky Marciano once regarded training as a religion but near
the end he hated even the smallest things about it
The so-called experts trying to rate the Moore and Robinson
' bouts are rapidly becoming old-age experts who could qualify
for positions with the Social Security Administration
"They should know a little about running at 5:30 in the morn-
ing" Billy Graham stresses
"That's where the best fighters go to Pot when they get old" '
PRINCETON PANEL
STUDIES CAPITALISM
PRINCETON N J 1A)---A re
search center to teach the princi
pies of the American capitalistic
economy ha E been established here
Calledt he Princeton Panel the
center will invite leading scholars
and researchers to "study how
American capitalism serves social
and moral as well as economic
values"
The Panel also aims to show
"how the market can be a demi-
cratic free-voting process in which
the buying housewife can make or
break the producer"
'Farm Girl 13
Preparis To
Attack Records
By BOB GALLIMORE
ELMDALE Kan ( AP )
slim 13-year-old Kansas farm girl
who "runs scared" is aiming at
any and all women's track and
field records
Ann Roniger a versatile bru-
nette of 5 feet 6 and 120 pounds
has already broken one j uni or
Olympic record and tied two
others In a- practice running
broad jump ehe cleared 16 feet
8 inches Dr John Davis Jr of
Topeka Kan Missouri V a II e y
AAU women's track committee-
man says this would have won
the title at e v e r y national wom-
en's AAU meet except one in the
last 20 years
Ann will be 14 on Feb 14 1957
and then will be eligible to com-
pete in regular AAU women's
events as well as junior Olympic
competition She can continue in
the latter class through her 17th
year
"There is absolutely no limit to
her potential" says Dr Davis
who discovered her by accident
and has become her coach and
adviser "Her natural ability and
stamina are phenomenal If she
works hard and continues to de-
velop she has a veil good chance
to be the first Kansas girl ever to
make an Olympic track team"
Ann first entered track compe
CAPTAIN EASY
r IF UNCLE JOE
KNEW VD TOLD YOU
ABOUT 6WiF1N' THINFOR HIMI NFO BEAT
ME UR EASYL I WONT
EVER DO IT A6A111
JIONESTi
Okkit I WON'T TELL HIMIF you
KE6P youg WORA CLANCYt NOW
VAT DO VOL) KNOW A600'
THAT ROBSERI OF HASEN'S SAFE
5
FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS
LI'L ABNER
rtED RYDER
m
' tition in 1951 shortly after her
family moved here from Manhat-
tan Kan where her father Pas-
cal Roniger worked for the state
board of health
She quickly proved herself a
faster runner than her friends
at the Elmdale grade school In
i1952 she entered county-wide
' competition and began an impres-
I sive collection of blue ribbons
1 She came to Dr Davis' attcn-
A tion when her parents met him by
ri chance on a bus going to a Uni-
t versity of Kansas football game
d last fall He arranged for her first
big test last May — at the Kansas
Junior Olympic meet in
Li- Lawrence
s In that meet she set a new
r junior Olympic standing broad
ro jump record of 8 feet 6 inches
ig She also anchored a Topeka girls'
et relay team that ran the 220 in
of 265 seconds easily breaking the
Y existing junior Olympic mark of
e- 271
in In subsequent jun:or Olympic
n- meets in Boulder Colo and
le Houston Tex she tied the rec-
ords for the 50 and 65-yard dashes
'' in 64 and 93 seconds and broke
n-
her own standing broad jump
OKLAHOMA RE
an SUPE STORES
Associate Store
Okemah Okla Pho 530
niWaldiiii0011
CI-ILL L
:UD AOOK
'RONtsr SEE
viHur IT IS —
-u---- -
mark with a lesp of 8 feet 634
inches
Since then she's been in train-
ing for next year when Dr
Davis will take her to the National
AAU women's meet Be feels she
Is ready for general competition
In the IA and 220' -yard dashes
and in high jump and hurdle
events These are not open to her
Nmwm
SUNDAY NOVEMBER 25 1950
in junior Olympic competition
She's cleared 4 feet 10 inches in
practice high jumps with appar-
ntly little effort and Dr Davis
says she is developing a smooth
hurdle form
Ann follows faithfully a rigorous
training program charted by Dr
Davis sticks to the strict diet of
an athlete
AUCTION SALE
Baking Equipment
I will sell at public auction the following described
property at my place of business 319 West Broad-
way Okemah Oklahoma
Monday 1:00 PM Hop 26
MOTH Wit 1-14EY DECIDED ONLY A
tvuvr SAALLf AGILE PERSON
" COULD'VE EGCNPED THRU
TRE4N50M1 U1456E141
sy YOUR UNCLE -
Ott HELLO
CAPPON
EN5Y1
Ovens — Pans — Sheets — Wrapping and
Slicing Machines -- Bo41s — Molds —
Benchs — Mixers — Rack t — Whips
Show Cases — Exhaust Fans — Cash Re
gister — Safe — Filing Cabinet — Check
Machine
Other items too numerous to mention
DLIT I WAS TAK-
ING OUT THE
TACKLE ALL
AFTERK10014 AT
FOOTBALL
1 PRACTICE-- r
JOE BRYANT Owner
V E WYRICK & SON Auctioneers
' TOO SAD YOUR BROTHER
FEELS AS HE COES ABOUT
THE BOYS augi MR50514EA
HE WON'T SEE CLANCY
PERFORM AT THE GRANO A
SOPENING NEXT WEEK
r9i-611 Mitt
WE'D gErTTER
NOT EVEN LET
HIM SEE YOU
Wirli li61EW5Yi
?c:Woet
1M M a 1 E111M M N
AND rM TOO 13LI5HED1O
TAKE ANYBODY ELSE OUT
TONiGHTV
ITS SOME KIND
0' CI-N CRITTER
TI NV GOT IT
TH' TOE if
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'1100 KAKEL7 WAR'?
UC?JCOALOtLl
LAWERA IA061
Irkoc
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LOOSE NOW TO
1 Dia A HOLE! Ise
i
I would like to hear a union leader say that it might be better OKAY yI wON'T TELL HIMIF YOU ug MORA ciAwcyt NOW 40T TREY DECIDED ONLY A OltHELLO TOO SAD YOUR BROTHER WE'D gErTTER
for our nation the working man included if wages prices and 1HIMli --"":' Km o imuvr SMALL AGILE PERSON CAPTAIN FEELS AS HE COES ABOUT NOT EVEN LET
everything else stayed put for a while" ir IE UNCLE JOE voitkI DO YOU KNOW A600' 111 COULD'VE ESCAPED THRU EASY! THE 130Y5' CLUB MRSONEA HIM SEE YOU
"" KNEW VD TOLD YOU THAT ROBBERY OF HAGEN'S SAFE A TRANSOM UNSEEN HE WON'T SEE CLANCY WITH USEASYL
THERE IS of course a warning here for the steel masters who r ABOUT SiMPIAr THINGS sy YOUR UNCLE— PERFORM AT THE GRAND
set prices es well as for the union leaders who demand wage in- 1 FOR HIM HE'D BEAT aft ' 1 1 weir Iwo ?tit OPENING NE)T CII
gi
titip d-oups r
creases if the wage increases granted in recent contracts do come i T AG
ME UP EASY' I WW1 taftwa i g411 I ' 0
EVER DO IAIN i 41111 tem 1-:
t of increased productivity as Ir Fairless says they should lll
JIONESTi 1 - ' "" Ise ie - '' t- ipot is 1
ou 1 1
President Eisenhower campaigned with "the stable dollar" as his ow t w astil '
l
timber one issue Gov Adlai Stevenson campaigned with heavy t r ‘ - ' k6 ! 1
' 1 i i '
1 o : - 14 l " ( ot
critical emphasis on the rise in the cost of living He called inflation ' ' —
TH t I
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- lb
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One of the most Important jobs of the new administration and ‘ 1 4 1 r4 i tf
I
7M774 GRAYSON'S SCOREBOARD --- I 1
the new Congress as the active policemen on the beat—is to stop
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Strong, Jack W. Okemah Daily Leader (Okemah, Okla.), Vol. 31, No. 260, Ed. 1 Sunday, November 25, 1956, newspaper, November 25, 1956; Okemah, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2166261/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.