The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 55, No. 57, Ed. 1 Monday, May 6, 1946 Page: 4 of 6
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Tonr
151 Reno (OMa.) frafly TrTbune
Monday
6, 1946
£l fecno Daily Tribum
■ 01 ..... ■' ■ ... ........— •
SsilecT dally except Saturday from 307 South Bock Wand Avenue,
and entered aa second-class mall matter under the act of March 3, 1879.
BAT J. OVER
Editor and PabU
Seems to Be Sort of a 6eme
HMC HARLE
Metm Editor
DEAN WARD
Hollywood
Film Shop
By Patrida Clary
United Frees Oorreanowlant
Hie ASSOCIATED PRESS is raolosively enUUed to the use of re-
poMimllroi «f all the news dispatches counted to It or not credited by
this paper, and also to all the local news therein.
rights of publication of special dispatches herein also are reserved
MEMBER
OK I AM AM A PRESS
ASSOCIATION
BY MAIL IN CANARIAN AND
ADJOININO COUNTIES
Three Months-----------------$1-78
Months ................$3.00
. .............$5.28
and well led. In
■attoftod with nothin* taw- H TUn.
be complete.
Unveiling a Foreign Policy
^THANKS to Secretary of Suite Byrnes, it can no longer
1 be.said that the United States lias no foreign policy.
Bv presenting hi- liropoupd fot r-power German disarma-
ment treaty to the foreign ministers’ conference in Paris,
Mr. Brrnes finally put American statesmanship in the van
of America’s material and moral strength. Now, better
than at any time since the wnr ended, the world can see
where this country is going and how it proposes to pet
there.
Mr. Byrnes’ proposal seemed to put an etui to his for-
mer role of conciliator. He took a positive and courageous
step which, though it will 1m? opposed at home and abroad,
at least commits the United States to a definite policy.
This alliance would reverse a seemingly growing
trend in this country to discount Germany’s menace as u
repeated offender against world peace. America takes the
lead in asking that the powers which conquered the Nazis
now assume the heavy and serious responsibility of a
quarter-century's watchfulness over the people who fostered
Bismarck and Wilhelm and Hitler.
* * *
ISOLATION is not dead in America, and an agreement to
* police Germany for 26 years would not be greeted by
unanimous cheers. But Mr. Byrnes has taken steps to
Avoid the mistakes whereby Woodrow Wilson lost the coun-
try's (and the Senate’s) support for the League of Na-
tions. He has had the counsel of two influential members,
one Democrat and one Republican, of the senate foreign
relations committee. These senators have accompanied
him to Paris in an obvious demonstration of their support.
Mr. Byrnes’ projmsal has also, in effect, forced Russia
to present positive proof of her good intentions in Europe.
At the same time, Mr. Byrnes gives a definite, if lim-
ited, answer to Mr. Churchill's plea for an Anglo-Ameri-
can alliance. In Mr. Byrnes’ plan there is no provision
for making Germany a buffer state for western Europe,
either.
* * *
rpHUS the secretary of state lias revived a plan for Ger
1 many which, during the war, was generally agreed to
be prudent and necessary. He has made a wise provision
for Germany's place with due regard for the united nnt-
iona as well as for the Big Four.
He has forsaken his somewhat hesitant earlier attitude
by initiating a plan which the other powers are almost
bound to accept, at least in principle, ns an evidence of
J their good sense and good will.
Men are more intelligent than women, says a writer.
So that’s why they wear double-breasted suits on hot
days, eh?
THE MTOUY: Gun-wiw Dabby flXHEY
I 1 vlllni
drove back through the I She added, "And you know, I’m
Weak, of Cage Cod >MU acta and | A village and out onto the state | kind of licked sometimes when
drama, like . lombov at 19. Her highway. Then Debby turned the | something happens and Lille Isn’t
Hater Ague. warn, her .he’ll, car off on the Bayberry Point , there
■ There’, been a lot of errone-
ous hand kissing In Hollywood, on
the screen and off. that’s going to
stop when a Frenchman here
Ills say.
He Is Paul Gone, the energetic
and capable technical adviser on
Darryl P. Zanucks "The Razor's
Edge" at 20th Century-Pox.
Is a lot of hand-kissing in the pic-
ture by Clifton Webb and other
French characters, and Coze stands
by to see that none of It Is muffed.
“The rules for hand-kissing are
aa strict as the rules for table eti-
quette,” he said, “and a few lessons
in them wouldn't hurt some of the
pscudo-gallanta around Hollywood
who affect hand-kissing like they
do clgaret holders and accents.”
Coze feels so strongly about the
whole thing that he did a book,
which covers his specialty as thor-
oughly as Emily Post covers other
matters of etiquette.
Here's what he told the cast
about hand-kissing, and if you’re
an avocatlonal hand-klsser you
might well take notes.
"Kissing the hand means equal-
ity of rayk or that the lady Is of
superior rank," he said. "For ex-
ample, a well-known and wealthy
hanker might kiss the hand of n
music-hall star In order to make
her feel that she Is his superior.
“But the same banker will not
kiss the hand of the old governess
or the one who has been caring for
his children for 30 years and is
considered a part of the family."
Then Coze went on to outline
what he called “typical amusing
mannerisms" in kissing the hand
of the, lady with whom one Is
'ltrting.
"One Is to kiss the inside of the
hand—the palm,” he said. “Or If
r-
'T wonder if he ever will get over his contact with the
Riumuui uni,tiers in Germany last year1” R*
Behind the Scenes
In Washington
BY PETER UNION
NEA Washington Correspondent
WASHINGTON, D. C.—(NEA)—How to make oven.14 million ton.
" of bread grains meet requirements for over 21 million tons il
the first six months of 1946 is the pretty little problem now puzzltni
an outfit known ns CFB, the Combined Food'Board.
How this CFB operates' is a little-known story, though it is probably
the most important international organization in
the world today—not even excepting the United
Nations, since bread comes before peace.
Started as a war agency in 1942, CFB was •
combined chiefs of staff organization to plan top
strategy on the supply of food to Allied armiea
and civilian populations. The United State, und
Britain were the original members, Canada coming
in the following year.
Today the members of the board are Secretary
of Agriculture Clinton P. Anderson for the U. 8..
Maurice I. Hutton for Britain, and J. G. Gardiner
for Canada With their deputies, executive of-
ficers, a secretariat headed by M. M. Benidt of
the U. S., and 16 Commodity Committees of experts from the Wash-
ington embassies of a score or more nations, they have headquarter*,
in the U. S. Department of Agriculture administration building.
to boas me around." She
Eighteen people were robbed in an Illinois restaurant.
The fact that it was by Iwo bandits makes it news.
never find a husband unlaw Hie
change. her wuy.. Debby foe.
duck-.hooting with EUie, Bart and
Joel despite bad wenlher. EUle
for. out in hi. boat to retrieve n
bird, kerns to toee aa oar, i*
caught helplessly In (be . w I f t
eunent. Bart plan, to row the
other two to the mainland, then
go after Elite.
* * *
XI
IT seemed hours that they were
$ .splashing along the marshy
edge of the Meadow, although .she
knew it couldn't have been more
than 15 minutes. Joel had hur-
ried ahead until he had got up be-
side Bart, where he had taken
hold of the rope tco, but the Bklff
glided along behind tltcm without
their doing any real pulling, just
an occasional tug when the rope
went taut. You could see they
were hurrying, and yet all their
movements were slow, as they al-
ways have to be in the water.
At last they were nt the end of
the Meadow, and it was a short
row across to the mainland. “After
Read. That brought them out on saw Joel Hnd tart exchange quick
high ground, where they oould glances.
get a good view all around. , she moved awav and pulled her
They got out and stumbled to | visor down over her eyes. “Ill be
the edge of the bluff and stood j nn rigrhit now when I get doing
sideways to the wind, braced, something." She looked up and
holding on to their visors as they | down th(1 shore. ‘. Look. Bart, you
squinted out at the bay. 1 take your boat and go that way.”
the lady wears a glove, the man rpHE Combined Food Board did not wish this large job on itself,
will gently lower the cuff of the The board vbas to have been abolished last December. But as the
food crisis has grown worse, the board has been continued until the
end of 1946, and It may have to be continued another year.
CFB was forced to operate in secrecy duping the wnr, because feod
will gently
glove and then kiss the wrist."
If the lady wears one of the new
above-the-elbow gloves, well,
maybe the man had a better Idea
n the first place.
was ammunition, and the submarine blockade had to be overcome.
Until recently, this rule of secrecy has been strictly followed. But
Just compliment n woman on a dress if you wnnt to
find out how many years she has had it.
»ge.
bad
A man is really old when he can pass an apple orchard
and not remember a stomach ache.
One good thing enn be said for automobiles,
made mortgages respectable.
They
8ome of the candidates who maintain they will win
their races or eat: their hats had better be shopping for
eoft-felt headgear.
And right straight In front of
ihum, not more than two hundred
yards out from shore, was Baft,
and he was busy handling ills skiff
in that wind.
Debby led the way to a path
that went down the bluff. And
then she saw that Br.rt was com-
ing in toward them.
She was surprised to see him
looking so serious. He clambered
over the seats and stood ankle
deep In the foam beside the bow.
He had thrown back the hood of
his parka, and the wind nt his
back flattened down his close-
cropped hair, as It does a Held of
grass “You haven’t seen anything
of him?" he asked breathlessly,
and his eyes were wide and wor-
ried. It was the first time in her
life that Debby had ever seen him
Lesson in English
j since food is so important, and all eyes are now focused on CFB
{ decisions, for the future more and more of its work ghould be con-
ducted in the goldfish bowl.
The principal reason for all the secrecy is that the Combined
Food Board has no authority. It was not created by law, and there
Bhe pointed to the south. “There
are two creeks down there I
wouldn't be able to get across. But
WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: Do
not say, "TJic clothes have been
The
is no law behind it. The board can only recommend to vnrious copn-
a fair
tries where they might send surpluses to do the most good in
distribution.
I can walk a mile or more tills tatindlied. so often
correct preterit Ls laundered, say
way before I come to anything."
She turned to Joel. "And you take 1
the car and go find John Qualey.
Just start asking anybody you see
in the village and pretty soon
somebody will know where he ts.
You find him and tell him to bring
anybody he can find."
The clothes have been laundered.
OFTEN MISFRONOUNCED.
Naphtha. Pronounce naf-tha, iirst
a as in at, second a as in ask
unstressed, and not nap-tha.
OFTEN MISSPELLED: Inten-
tion: Hon. Tension: sion.
SYNONYMS: - Careful, cautious.
"How do you spell it?” he asked, i - ,
He was looking at her strangely, watchful vigilant, alert, guarded.
■FURTHERMORE. the board takes no action except by unanimous
A agreement of all countries concerned. No agreement, no action.
This, naturally, slows up all CFB recommendations.
The first break in this no-publicity policy came a few days ago,
when CFB issued a statement on world supplies and allocations of
sugar.
The job of the Combined Food Board is to weigh all factor* <8
world need and supply. When agreement can’t be reached, the
board keeps on arguing, asking claimants to scale down requirements,
asking surplus countries to try to dig up R little more, until a coin,
promise formula is reached that all can agree on.
"Q-u-a-l-e-y. John Qualey.”
“Okay," he said, still looking at
her the same way. And before he
started back up the bluff he said,
“You’re quite a girl, Debby."
(To Be Continued!
it net nick up the other decoys. 1 "There’s no use in kidding our-
selves about this thing," he was
saying.
She stared at him, fasclnatdB. He
We talked to a man the other tiny who was 97 years
He said he hadn’t an enemy»in the world. We
t that was a wonderful thing, until he added—that
outlived them all.
A pedestrian is a man with a wife, two sons, three
' ters, and one automobile.
’ Aty shot a prisoner the other day, on the way to
penitentiary, because he tried to end a sentence with
wn Memory lane
May 6, 1921
The highschool play, “Peg o’ My Heart,” will be given
and Friday evenings at the highschool auditor-
. P. Gregory of Guthrie, state secretary of the Re-
Merchants association, was principal speaker at the
' luncheon of the Canadian county retailers yes-
Rfternoon, and although his time was limited he
a short, pithy talk.
state convention of Knights of Columbus, in an-
lec
here yesterday, re-elected Charles E. Dlerker
to as state deputy and Ray Sigfried of Tulsa as
May 6, 1936
studei
ef the 138 students who will graduate from El
next week has said “Good morning, dear
raarqjfegularity than Marion Hensley, who
to absent nor tardy during his 12 years of
school.
will share in $60,000 allocated for operation
' _ offices fa §0 Oklahoma cities by the fed-
administration.
and pick up the other decoys
Probably be an hour or so."
After he’d gone they stood side
1-y side on the narrow beach, and
Joel asked, "Where would Elite
be from here?"
She pointed. “Right through the
Meadow."
"Let’s go somewhere where we
con see. Could we see him from
back there where we left the ear?"
Yes," said Debby, and they
sloshed along the beach In their
boots, hurrying. Joel had the sack
of decoys, onh now he had it over
his shoulder, the way Elbe car-
ried them.
But when they got to the path
that ran to the car. Elite wasn't
In sight. The mist seemed to hove
lifted too, but they couldn’t see
him anywhere.
She could see Bart plainly
enough; he was already past the
Meadow, and he wa* skimming
along, not rowing, just steering,
first with one car and then with
the other. She could even see that
he was half turned In the seat,
looking ahead.
She thought. "He can't see him
no more tnan we can," and It felt
as though her mouth and throat
were all hollow and full of air,
and there wasn’t any gimp In her
shoulders. She said aloud. "Some-
thin’s happened to him."
Joel didn’t say anything, and
she was glad he had sense enough
not to try to say something hadn't
happened to him.
She looked across the tar, and
it was surprising how dearly you
could see the opposite shore. Its
broken line of creeks and coves
and marsh and bluffs. And look-
ing up she saw that beyond the
scattered, racing clouds, the sky
was steely and full ef light. "It's
clearing up." she said
"Bum." said Joel. "He's prob-
ably somewl*re over on that shore
now — waiting for somebody to
come along and pick him up. What
do you say we drive around the
other side there and leek for
him?"
Problem a Day
was very interesting. And then he
Bob and Bill start riding towards
each other on bicycles at the same
time, Bob at rate of 15 miles an
hour and Bill at 12 miles an hour.
observant.
WORD STUDY: "Use a word
three times and it is yours." Let
us increase our vocabulary by mas-
tering one word each day. To-
days word. INCUBUS; anything
that tends to weigh down or dis-
co wage. (Pronounce first u as in
unit, nccent first syllable). ‘'Super-
stition! that lion-id incubus which
dwelt in darkness . . is passing
away without return."—Carlyle.
Look and Learn Public Records
made a quick motion with his When they meet. Bob has ridden
hand toward Joel, and Joel put his
arm around her. "Feeling dizzy?"
he asked.
"No." she said deliberately. "Just
a little weak in the head." She
giggled. "Nothin’ new about that,
I guess."
She glanced timidly at Joel’s
18 miles more than Bill. How
far apart were thev wh»n start
ing?
ANSWER
162 miles,
gains 3 miles each hour: to gain
18 miles, they ride for 6 hours: |
POLITICAL
ANNOUNCEMENTS
The Tribune is authorized to
announce the candidacies of the
i following Individuals, subject to the
F.xplanotion—Bob prtmary election July 3:
Democratic Ticket
1. What is the average normal
temperature of the human body?
2. What president of the Uni-
ted States never attended .school?
3. What is the value of "pi,"
the ratio of the circumference of
a circle to Its diameter?
4. Where did Columbus land on
his first voyage to America?
5. With what does the science
of numismatics deal?
ANSWERS
1. 98.6 degrees Fahrenheit.
2. Andrew Johnson (1808-75'.
3. 3.1416.
4. On the Island of San Salva-
dor, in the West Indies.
5. Coins.
Marriage Licenses
Lessert Femberg, 26, and Bon- ...
nic- Bruton, 28, both of Oklahoma ■'
City.
Russel O. Thresher, 21, and Dol- Jjf J
!)• Taylor, 19. both of El Reno.
Warranty Deeds
J. W. and Anna K. Boevers to
Walter C. Boevers. SW 23-11-7.
Virginia Barnard and A. Francis
Porta to J. Ray Chapman. E SW
11-13-8.
Mineral De-d
Emma and Bernard Huchtcman
to W. F. Meagher. SE 14-12-7.
multiply 15 and 12 each by 6;
face, and he was smiling at her. I add Ihese two results.
Explorer
Aa.ner i® l*rcvlo.« Puttie
HORIZONTAL 4 Remain
1 Pictured polar 5 Had on
explorer. Lin- 6Spokcn
lORustlT^bdy ’Sloping way
11 Of the car 8 Thallium
13 Aramaic (ab.) (symbol)
14 Impolite 9 Male star
18 Select 11 Gem
19 Bark 12 Duration
20 Unclose 13 Upward
21 Part of "be’’ 16 Beloved
22 Advertise- 17 Finishes
ment (ab.) 24 Past
23 Jumps
29 Constellation 43 Dash
32 Eras 44 Indian
27 Asterisks 26 Observe
30 Turn right 27 Place
31 Hearing organ 2$ Oily liquid
32 Oot up ’
34 Rubbish
37 Earth goddess
38 Behold! <
3$ His latest .
expedition
was to ——
Africa
4$ Smaller
■mount
46 Cannon sound
48 Blackthorn
49 On the
sheltered side
80 Poker stake
81 He plana to
return to the
-later
84 Restore
VHtTICAL
l» v
33 Genuine
35 Groove
36 Residence
25 Footlike part 40 Thu*
41 Rip
weights
45 Denomination
46 Lure
47 One time .
« 52 Compass point
42 Broad (comb. 53 Tantalum
form) (symbol)
For Governor:
ROY J. TURNER
For Justice Supreme Court, Dtst. 3:
RANDELL S. COBB
For Judge, Criminal Court Appeals:
JOHN A. BRETT
For 6th Diet. Representative:
BILL LOGAN
For State Senator:
JIM A. RINEHART
CLAUDE W. CHERRY
For State Representative:
JEAN L. PAZOURECK
E. R. BARNHART
For District Judge:
BAKER H. MELONE
WILLIAM L. FOGG
R. J. KINTZ
For County Attorney:
HARRY LORENZEN
Fee County Treasurer:
A. T. “Cap” UtARCH
For County Sheriff:
LLOYD PALMER
ART C. JAHN
For Co«sty Surveyor:
BILL ALEXANDER
J. H. “Bus” GRIFFIN
Far Commissioner, Mist. No. 8:
FLOYD ELLISON
R. G. COURTNEY
BwuMifiH Tfcktt
Cl*ACK smith
50 YEARS IN CHOIR
I NORTH PLATTE, Neb. —(U.R)—
1 A. T. Yost completed 50 years of,
| service In the choir of the First
I Lutheran church here Easter. Yost
began singing in the choir the
Sunday after he was confirmed in
April 1896.
COMMUTER BUYS LINE
INDIANAPOLIS—(UJ>J— Kenneth
Kunkle, an OPA official, commut-
ed dally from an outlying com-
munity to Indianapolis each day
by bus. The bus line he patronized
changed its schedule one day,
making it awkward for him to get
to'work on time. So Kunkle bought
the bus line and ordered the form-
er schedule resumed. rj
3
Sally’s Sallies
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Dyer, Ray J. The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 55, No. 57, Ed. 1 Monday, May 6, 1946, newspaper, May 6, 1946; El Reno, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc919807/m1/4/: accessed April 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.