The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 53, No. 169, Ed. 1 Friday, September 15, 1944 Page: 4 of 6
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The El Reno Daily Tribune tl» fort C*t»
A Blur Bibbon Tiev^p^per Serving i 31i:r JUMmti Coihtnnniiy
El SenoJOkl^ T'aily Tribtme
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fc^ueu dally except Saturday from 207 South Rock Island avenue.
»nd entered as second-class mall matter under the act of March 3, 1879.
RAY J. DYER
Editor and Publisher
hUDC.E IIARI.E
News Editor
DEAN WARD
Advertising Manager
The ASSOCIATED PRESS 1« exclusively entitled to the use of re-
puol leal Ion nt all the news dispatches rredlted to it nr not credited by
Ibis paper, and also to all the local news therein.
All rights of publications of special dlspatones hpreln also are reserved.
MEMBER
SOUTHERN NEWSPAPER
PUBLISHERS ASS’N.
MEMBER
OKLAHOMA PRESS
ASSOCIATION
DAILY SUBSCRIPTION RATES BY MAIL IN CANADIAN AND
BY CARRIER ADJOINING COUNTIES
One Week ------------$ .20 Three Months________$1.50
Three Months___________$2.25 Six Months_______________$3.00
Due Year__________________$8 00 One Year___________$5.00
Including Sales Tax
Friday, September IS, 1044
Those alio read filthy novels are not delivered from evil.
goo.I thoughts: Deliver us from evil.—Matt. 0:18
Think only |
Return of the Vanished American
i INK of these days the doorbell will ring and there once
again, like the first robin of spring, will be the Vanished
American. You remember, the cheery and persistent citizen
with the sample case of brushes or hosiery, or perhaps a
mechanized carpet sweeper. We won’t say when that day
will come, for fear of being called complacent. But come it
will. Ami a typical chapter in American life will be re-
sumed.
Plans must be shaping up already. For iP Wrttttd be a
gnat mistake to I it ink that reconversion will begin and end |
at the factory. Even now the general stuff of door-to-door I
salesmanship probably has the maps spread out and is j
pondering new strategies and tactics for the day when the)
all-out campaign of persuasion moves forward again into I
every street and countryside.
Canny consumers would do well, then, to reconvert
their thinking into peacetime channels. Otherwise they may |
run into some early pitfalls. The first one probably will
be the false aura of cordiality that is bound to pervade the
resumption of front-stoop merchandising.
* # *
rpilE Vanished American, returning to his appointed I
rounds will certainly be welcomed as the Americans were jii/ashinoton. sept, is — tspe-
eomed in Paris. Mnvbo his wares won’t ho riroomu nf I cioti i h„ Japanese r>____*
Hollywood
Film Shop
fViday.
Private Brevet Abfftad
3t C
By Erne3t Foster
United Press Correspondent
Inside
The Axis
Behind the Scenes
In Washington
||OI.LYWOOD, Sept. 15 - (U.Rl-
Ingrld Bergman, five feet
seven and a half, mifl Gregory ,
Pack, six feet three, are making
the tallest love in movie history.
There are taller men and taller
girls in Hollywood, but they have
not been cast together. So Miss
Bergman and Peck, as pioneers in
tall love in David C. Selkirk's
"The House of Dr. E'dwardes,”
have something interesting observe-
j tions.
"Mv neck feels better." said
Peek. "I mean, it’s a break to be
I lnolp or less eye-to-eye with your
| leading lady.
"Kissing short girls is fun. I
mean, kissing girls is fun. But for
motion picture purposes when you |
hold a pose practically all day !
long, It is belter not to have to1
stoop all the time."
Miss Berjman. from a vice versa 1
point of view, confirms this obser-
vation.
"he is getting tired of kissing
men who have to stand on boxes.
She admits a girl can make wtthl
the love-lio'hf n Kit
9-is,.., ■ ... ;;
“What temperature would you like your bath, £
Scientists Make
Study of Tooth
Lesson in En
the love-light a bit more convinc- • FRF8NO, Oaiif
zrBTzrz,rs z
BY PETER EDSON
Presenting Eaets Assembled
b.v the Foreign Service
Division of tl,e Office of
War Information
welcomed in Paris. Maybe his wares won’t be dreams of
.streamlined transparent plastic. But to the housewife, down
to the last bristle of the vegetable brush and reduced to
wiedling a broom, they will look like the dawn of a brave
new post-war world.
This won’t last, of course. The encyclopedia vendor
will follow the Fuller Brush man. The vacuum cleaner
salesman will be succeeded by the boy who is working his
father’s way through highschool by means of magazine
subscriptions. The big parade will be on. And the unwary,
exhuberant housewife may find that she is beating a path
to he'- own door to buy every better mousetrap that’s of-
fered.
* # *
it she is forward looking, the housewife even now will
be brushing up on her sales resistance. She might
practice up on that old Scandinavian housemaid impersona-
tion she used to use when the salesman asked, “Are you
Hie lady of Ihe house?” That always eased the shame of
falsehood with a touch of light-hearted drama. She might
give some thought to her neglected footwork, for it takes
speed to beat the salesman’s toe to that trategic territory
between the door and the jamb.
These things will all come in handy again. And thev’ll
lend zest to the endless contest of it, will and endurance
which once more will brighten the national scene in that
great day a-coming.
dal i—The Japanese Domel
agency lias announced the develop-
ment of a new two-stage stoker
that, using an inferior grade of
coal, increases the steam gen-
eration of a 65 tons-per-hour boil-
er by 80 percent and saves 15
Percent in coal consumption. Domel
revealed incidentally that Jap-
anese coal power steam plants
and light metais and chemical fac-
.4EA Staff Correspondent
B™1*? ,AhC‘,in8 WI!B Chnirmnn J- A- King’s sensational announce-
,™?nt war-time controls over materials supply would he
lifted immedmteiy after the defeat of Germany, there is a generally
untold story of the WPB meeting in which this blltT-peace^uc-
ti°n program was planned.
The plan had been completed the Saturday
before Labor Day, under the direction of Stacy
“ay; tlhead °f WPB’s Bureau of Planning and
. tatistics. It was a document of some 60 pages,
and only a limited number of copies had been
made for distribution to Ihe top government peo-
ple customarily sitting in on WPB meetings. The
idea was lhat they could familiarize themselves
with the contents over the week-end. and he ready
Tor the Tuesday meeting of the board, with .any
objections anyone might care to file..
In spite of the fact that these were confidential
story. They're shy. actually shy.
Their most torrid love scene in
"Dr. Edwardes," played convinc-
ingly In a bedroom; had to be shot , west of here
behind closed doors because the -ri,„ '
OFTE.'N MISPROJ
than scientists had previously be-1
lleved likely, may be indicated by' Indlcative. Pronounce ii
a mineralized camel's tooth found a11 *’s *• ln H and acc
In an Indian burial ground 40 miles syllable, not the first.
OFTEN MISSPELLEi
principals were embarrassed.
i The tooth was discovered among j point; one s. two p’s.
srzsrTZJTJt; •“ '=•*'5 srsjss i
form
giggles. Director Alfred
SYNONYMS: Pride, 1
SI
Hitchcock put up with giggles Hs ! °f P<-nnsylva'lifl museum' ‘'as been |
long as a patient man could, then iseekinB to establish whether the WORD STUDY: 'Us
firmly closed the set.
tooth and the bones were buried at three times and it is
us increase our vocal
The film, incidentally, is a psv- ! thl*iame tlme
chological murder mystery. Miss ■ The find is ■fchlficant. the an- mastering one word eact
Bergman plays the part of a lady throP°lo0lst explained, because the day’s word: IMPORTUNi
doctor, a psychiatrist. She inter- Prehistoric American camel pre- 1 persistently; ply
prets dreams and analyzes emo- ' sumably became extinct, anywhere requests.
or p
They have |
tions, including love, ail throuah •from 30000 to 60.000,000 years ago, importuned the court wi
the film.
Maybe that's why she giggles.
i while scientists have generally be- sonable demand
lieved that man’s residence in North
America dates back only about 20.-
Tj^AR from being forgotten, the 000 years-
^ wilri tlfUCt Brit' /inmn 4.. 1. t.i. VAfiOUS
Swift
Edson
“'lnri.iOSt.50 Pe,cent of have been leaks o.nnT
efficiency in steam generation in
thi« 8°vemment plans, someone tipping off
this or tljat segment of industry which might be affected One
rqcent months because of the gen- of the troubles with WPB in the past has been that these leaks
ein! utilization of low quality coal with a certain amount of delayed action, have enabled pressure
and that it h,d been necessary to 8r°ups from industry or labor to start under-cover attacks against
use 4i) per.ent more eonl to arhieve ProP°sed board orders, whittling them down or amending them with
result, ob'ainable with good quality hmitations that spoiled their effectiveness.
fu^( j J^KUC aHowed no such grass to grow under his feet. As soon as
Otliei achievements of Japanese he got the board’s approval of his plan, he announced it The
science as announced recently by Press conference which Krug held with May the next day was more
tin- Tokyo radio and the Domel “ ‘he nature of a postseflpt to clear up a few odds and ends
agency in overseas transmissions: I . Stacy May made lhe presentation of the plan, and then it was
wild west has come into his- !
Coking Coals
Termed Ass<
Various testa will be undertaken
trionic bloom and stars, directors to fietermine. if possible, the age of
and artists of western thrillers ;tlie bones- and the tooth. Although NORMAN. Sept 15—<
!«,eb,1pS 7 the aageeTtha: 1 ^ ^
Picture Awards association an- bollefi- especially in cases ed 8 n’onoP°lv resource ln
nounzed. j of mineralization, interested scien- | coaI- 11 >s shown in tests
Disclosing that riders of the !tists are hopeful they can get some ! far by the U S bureau
cellullod range will compete for
Oscars in an initial ceremony the
first week in November, the as-
sociation reported the awards will
idea of the age.
V. Calvon MeKim. head of Fres
no State college's geography and i
geology department, pointed out that 1 headquarters at the Uni’
Robert H. Dott, director o
!4ahoma Geological sur
consist of a bronze casting of a the tooth might have been washed Oklahoma, lias announced
1 Development of a new paint ,fo.r dis™ssion. Undersecretary of War Robert Patterson had
"100 percent foolproof" against n,, ,, - —- --------------- *»»* way miuugn
marine parasites and far superior" reeo^verJNa son s ®Pot authorization plan for limited
♦ c. 41„, Al% .. ! IM reconversion had been milling through the WPB maze Wnr n®
perial University professor, after ntt:l<'k °h reconversion during the absences of Lieut-Gen Brehon
10 years’ research of a vitamin dc- Somervell of the Army Service Forces, also sat silent.
With the Army approving, the plan was as good as put over It
was perhaps one of the most peaceful WPB meetings on record
...........-......... suvefi- a°m« consideration that the War Manpower Commis-
breeding art by another professor m'ght aeed addlt'anal legislation to ensure military production,
to such a point that afi sheen , G°vf.rnor. said he didn't think Congress would
born In s eertatn t.ii,,r, 1 approve legislation in the first place, and it wasn't needed in the
lage are twins JapnnPRe vl>* [ ,KP™nd' that objection was largely removed.
'J’HE idea that small business would need priority protection on
..........
Post-war business motto: Pull topether or pull to
pieces! 1
When tiro woman whose place is in the home is out
0! place, so is everything else.
The sun’s ape is put at about five million years. Mav-
tlinl s what comes of poinp to bed every nipht.
parents that a lot of thefr^JsTreToiSnp* homll (,t>rman
Because the manufactur
bucking broncho. j 200 or 300 miles and deposited with _______________________
The westerns’ ceremony will be the bones, which themselves might , rpQllires i,ieh-erade cokii
held in the Gilmore stadium, and prove to be only a few hundred
the public will select
the win- years old.
Oklahoma has an asset th
Joyed by no other sect 10
rived from fish entrails that "In-
sures an egg a day" from chickens.
3. Refinement of the sheep-
POLITICAL
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Tlie Tribune is authorized t(
announce the candidacies of the
McKim also mentioned that In
the 1860's, more than 100 camels country outside the seat of
were brought to California to serve ent steel industry, chief!
as pack animals on the old Stock- Appalachian region, he sai
ton trail. Some escaped their cap- Although additional su
tivity. and one of them, he points coal suitable for making
out. might easily have left a tooth gical coke may yet be foui
ln an Indian grave to confound to^
United States, it is rather
day’s anthropologists. Hpwever. Dott believes, because the v
follow'na individuals snhWt J npwever. uottbeneves.be
the general ele-tlon Nov T McKim doubts that the tooth would has called forth
general election Nov. 7. havP mineralized in so short a
rpHE German propaganda min- J™ ma,er1ial* "Z38 easily °,v«rc°me by the argument that big
* ister nLww", business wouldn’t hog materials for privs'
Joseph Goebbels, never
run.
on the
,. _ , - ----------- — private enterprise on which
f„,. /-■” lbe government was not paying the cost, that processing millions
01 the accuracy of his of applications was physically impossible.
the Those objections out of the way, the plan sailed through and
this pronouncement in business got the green light. Krug, also, was off to a wonderful start
speech on Oct. 18. 1942 ‘ _________I_!Z1
Democratic Ticket
ister,
noted
prophe ies. unsuspectingly hit the
Down Memory Lane
mark
n
"Whoever
controls wheat, oil. nowledge
.__ . , . —- ---------- Ihe German angle and
lion and coal nnd in addition has the German interest.*'
tlie strongest army will win the Tlie newspaper said its expla-
w 11,1 ^ nation of the philosophy of Gcr-
mon communique-writers had been
Look and Learn
For State Representative!
E. R, BARNHART
For County Sheriff:
HORACE H. CLAPPER
For County Surveyor:
BILL ALEXANDER
For County Attorney:
ROY M. FAUBION
an intensi
all over the nation. No'
time- 1 time for Oklahoma to capl
’ But I believe that somewhere the advantage of this na
along the west coast of America," source, he says.
McKim declared, "someone Is going ~ -
to find the clue that will establish y' m "
the length of man’s residence in
America. I don’t consider our find-
ings or our theories at all conclu-
sive—but this camel's tooth may
be what we've been looking for."
Yukon
G u-alcl Freeman, three-year Yettcrnvm heino- p°°™OTE t0 "«•* dispatches prompted by lhe fact' tha7 son,e
1 Hu 1;.,,. . u l 1 . , . 1 m,m ,)U,,K Shifted 1 bv American correspondents on Germans "twist the meaning of
( ••aches A irjril Tillinghast and Edwin Porter.
Nazi atrocities in Poland Is pro- tbe words of the Gennan com
vided by this excerpt from a let- munique In such a way as to
ter nf a German soldier to his arrive at a different interpreta-
relatlves, as quoted by the Swiss tlon than ihe one that the mill-
newspaper Schaffhnuser Arbelter- tary authorities at headquarters
m "li ,an<* ^,ls' ^iul* Goddard and the latter’s sister
Miss If<*|t 11 Gatliff, 105G, South Bickford avenue. arV
spending; the week-end with relatives in Enid.
Mrs. J.
r? , m .'1' 1! K,-llce ai1‘I daughter, Catherine Bruce
tSi ^.de.rtreet* *«ve returned from a two-week v“it’wrS
zeitunR:
"For more titan three years I
have been stationed with my unit
in Poland. I cannot express what j
I have been through this long
time. What Is guing here is simply
awful. I am often nshamed to I
had assigned to it."
Problem a Day
1
Republican Ticket
JACK SMITH
CONVINCING SHOW
Two business competitors had
Mrs. Bruce’s son, Roscoe Williams, in Newark N I Fn
Kk ’mT ",0V *“"> -"/friend, in Es":
belon-4 to a nation that perpetrates equal capitals after one lost 40',’
such things against women and and the other gained 80'; How
Mr. and Mrs John Bonihoff and children 610 North
sprsftasi-asv.fcrS
s55S a~.s
childnen. You have to see with 1 much more
your own eyes to know how war' other?
degrades man. I had not formerly
believed that civilized Germans
would lend themselves to such
crimes. Today I know that thev
do.
"The saddest thing Is that we
nre all guilty, for we are looking
on without doing anything about
It."
* * *
did one invest the
1. In what way does anemia af-
fect the human body?
2 By whom was the game of | For County Sheriff:
tennis patented, and in what year?
3. What Is considered the high-
est grade of coal?
4 What country owns the Island
of Elba? a
5. What great orator was called
the "Unagitated Agitator?"
ANSWERS
1. Anemia is a deficiency in
the blood, causing pallor, heart
palpitation, and debility.
2. By Major Wingfield, England,
in 1874.
3. Anthracite.
4. Italy.
5. Wendell Phillips.
Mrs. Dan McIntyre of El Reno
was a caller at the J. C. Barnhill
home Wednesday afternoon. She
was accompanied by her husband
and their son, Louis McIntyre, of
Shawnee.
’
SEEING 1.
BELIEVING
loys M/j$ Y. rZ
POCATELLO ARMY AIR BASE, Lieutenant and Mrs. C. O. Twad- j
POCATELLO. Idaho <U.R>— Recently d«> and daughter. Jiminle Kaye, of
Private First Class Eddie Qayeski Columbus, Ohio, arrived Tuesday
of the air field band produced a to visit Mrs. Twaddeli's parents. Mr
war bond show "Strike Up the and Mrs. I A. Floyd, and other j
Band ’ here. The show was re-1 relatives.
Ported to quite a success but It Private J. W Cravey. who has
seemed to have affected Eddie him- J finished his basic training at Fort
self more than anyone else. A day: Rile.v. Kan., is spending a two-
or two after the show Eddie pur- week furlough with his wife and
chased a $1,000 war bond, the j their daughter. Carolen Ann. at the
largest single purchase made by an I home of her parents. Mr. and Mrs.
enlisted man on the field.
Frank Williams.
ANSWER
Twice as mu.'h more. Explana-
tion—Subtract 40 from 100; add 80
to 100: thus 60*; of one’s invest-
ment equals 180‘, of the other’s,
or a ratio of 3 to 1; subtract 1
from 3.
^EWSPAPER. In a heavily bomb-
ed German city recently car-
ried
G’ A Ba™ard, 614 South Hoff avenue aeeom |rled B” article by a P™mnent
ST2.SJS. r&r
jroo-d.,. t„„ ,he Century o'f ^Pro^reas exposition f?n i ’"NeVvousnew. depression and weak
“if ^5.ue 800 South Macomb avenue, who
M ’SZ Kir Tf f week
nMof D”he4n„ih_aarpa?f Jai?Per* Term., and Mrs. Josie
Allen of Bridgeport, Ala., who have been visaing*
Pinter, Mrs. Rrnwn . 1 visitingr
their
s£r-
nerves.
• el ■ 4
OTARTLING admission that
German high command com-
muniques “frequently” carry false
statements “as a means of mis-
leading the enemy" was made to
the 'German people recently by a
large newspaper ln southwestern
Qermany The newspaper insisted,
however, that “the basic attitude
of the German communique is
clear, unambigious and true”—pro-
vided one is prepared to
ack-
nn
■ ■ ■ ■
WE HAVE
FIRST GRADE LEE TIRES
THIRD GRADE TIRES
SEE US FOR—
• Repairs • Reliners • Reeapa
PHILLIPS BATTERIES
WASH and GREASE JOBS
Official Tire Inspection Station
Cook;ey Service Station
301 South Bickford
REV. CAVIN PRESENTS
“GOD’S BLUE STAR THAT TURNED TO GOLD!”
Amazing Message at 8 P. M. Sunday. Hear How God's Son Died for You!
“CROSSING THE JORDAN”
Message at
11:00 A. M.
Sunday
A Mesaage On
Christian
Victory
Bible School at 10:00 A.M.
Classes fer All Ages. Teaching Only The
Bible As It Is, For Men As They Are.
BIBLE CLASSES AT 7:00 P. M. FOR ALL AGES
TEACHERS:
W. R. Anderson—Adult Class in Auditorium.
Jack Jennings—Young People in Young Peoples Auditorium.
Mary Jane Johnson and Dorothy Gaines—Junior Young People in Class Hall
ATTEND
"There it was,
before my eyes!
This lovely fur coat
...and priced at
only *59.50 plu3
excise tax. I
don’t know how
Wards give such
values."
The coat Miss Y
likes so much is
still on display
here in our office.
Why not come in and
see it yourself?
And if you don■t
have a catalog, be
sure to ask for a
copy. One look
at its great as-
sortments and
you'll know
why we're
called...
OOK
as- ._
■M
in.
BIBLEJ BAPTIST CHURCH
1205 Sunset Drive
PREACHING: ’’IT DOES MAKE A DIFFERENCE WHAT YOU BELIEVE"
THE BIGGEST STORE
IN TOWN
MONTGOMERY VA
119 No. Bickford
El Reno Phone
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Dyer, Ray J. The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 53, No. 169, Ed. 1 Friday, September 15, 1944, newspaper, September 15, 1944; El Reno, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc919710/m1/4/: accessed April 23, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.