The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 53, No. 178, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 26, 1944 Page: 4 of 6
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FouV
El Reno, (Okla.) Daily Tribune
The El Reno Daily Tribune Incirlo
A Biu<* Ribbon Newspaper Serving a Bins Ribbon ( ommunlt? II
The Axis
fc*4W dally except Saturday from 207 South Rock Island avenue.
Uni entered as second-class mall matter under the act of March 3, 1879.
RAY J. DYER
Editor and Publisher
BUDGE MARIE
News Editor
DEAN WARD
Advertising Manager
The ASSOCIATED PRESS Is exclusively entitled to the use of re-
publicallon of all the news dispatches credited to It or not credited by
tins paper, and also lo all the local newts therein.
All rights of publications of special disparities herein also are reserved.
Right in the Thick of It
Tuesday, September 26, 104
Presenting Parts Assembled
by the Foreign Service
Division of the Office of
War Information
MEMBER
HOUTIIERN NEWSPAPER
1*1 RUSHERS ASS’N.
MEMRER
OKLAHOMA PRESS
ASSOCIATION
BY MAIL IN CANADIAN AND
DAILY SUBSCRIPTION RATES
BY CARRIER ADJOINING COUNTIES
One Week __________> .20 Three Months---------$1.50
Three Months_________*2.25 Plx Months---------------$3.00
One Year $8 00 One Year-----------*5 00
Including Sales Tax
VU A8HINOTON, Sept 26-tSpe-
rial)—A phrase reminiscent of
Tuesday. September 26, 1944
Many prefer profits from buxines* as usual lo freedom from domination
from the h west forces: They besought him that he would depart out of
their coasts.
‘Youth Shows But Half
is regards employment, the last three years have beer
y* groat times for industry’s old-timers. Many older work
er.s have been kept on beyond normal retirement age
Others have returned from letirement to fill up the rank.1
of labor and . incidentally, replenish their incomes.
Their help and know-how has been valuable, as th'*
experience of the Winchester arms people proves. Eight
months before Pearl Harbor the Winchester executives saw
what was coming and called in their 700 employes of 2C
or more years experience. They asked these veterans to
do a double task—stay on their regular jobs and also help
train new workers. <
The Veterans responded, formed into an organization
and proceeded to pass along their wisdom to the new-
comers who jumped the Winchester pn.vroll 400 percent
in 18 months.
“1 honestly believe,” said the Winchester works man-j Line swine"),
ager, “that thousands of American troops wouldn’t have
had Garand rifles and Winchester, carbines except for our
25-Year Service association. It’s been the quarter-century
boys and girls in our plant, and I suppose in every big
plant, that have armed the united nations.
“ The real battle of the production line has been man-
power. and we’ve used trained manixiwer to win it."
# $ #
rrHAT’S fine. But what’s in store for these oldsters in
1 the future? In his “Practical Psychology,” Dr. F. Ken-
neth Berrien of Colgate university argues “the wisdom ot
salvaging rather than shelving seniles.’ ’He points to the
analogy of the athletic coach who, linable to play, can
profitably pass along his skill to others. He suggests ad-
visory “exit jobs” to ease the employe’s adjustment to re-
tirement, and to avoid a company's loss of his accumulated
experience.
These are sensible suggestions. And certainly govern-
ment, business, the arts and the professions offer repeated
prool that usefulness does not end at 60 or 65. But to
broaden the example of this proof to include the wage earn-
er in the future will require tne full employment of today’s
most optimistic predictions.
• <f *!< sjt
Germany’s detent tn the last war.
"Etapphiifielst” (‘'Spirit of the
Rear"), is becoming increasingly
prominent In current Nnzi prop-
aganda alined at sustaining home-
front moialc in the face of allied
military gains and the necessity of
evacuating tens of thousands of
civilians from the German border
regions.
Nazi propagandists apparently are
fearful that the stories brought
bark into the interior by the evac-
uees and returning soldiers might
have a riiastlc cumulative effect
on the morale of the entire Oer-
innn people The controlled press
.and rndlo have warned soldiers
not to discus their hardships or
the weiRht of allied arms.
Those carrying such tales have j
been denounced ns spreaders of
"Lntrincnparolr n" ("Isjrlne ru-
mors” i.
Propaganda Minister Joseph
Ooehbels also has cautioned the
evacuees against "rumor-mongrr-
ing.” labeling all Germans show-
ing the least sign of pessimism as
Etappenhengst” (“Rear Line
Horses”).
The word "Etappenhengst" is a
slight variation of a word used in
Germany after the last war to <
characterize rpnr-llne civilians who
_wcre accused of undermining thr
army at the front. The word then
was "Etappenschweln" ("Rear-
Hollywood
Film Shop
Lily Bulbs Are
Yielding Profits
By Ernest Foster
United Press Correspondent
HOUMA. La., Sept. 26 — (U.R)
The annual harvest oi a south Loi
siana product which promises
develop into one of the chipf ag
cultural phases of this section
H°™°» » - •» - STS
* Beautiful Nancy Kelly knows airings the growers of Terrebon
Iqt of fellows, nice fellows with whom pa,.is!l s„nle $40.00,) annually, a
she runs around casually, stricilj proximulely 000,000 bulbs arc mt
for fun. you understand. keted each year
"Most of them are tied up roman- Tlle fact thal lhe Unlted slal
tlea Jy, she added, and want to „ses some 20.000.000 Faster lilv bul
tell me about It over a coke or dur- oacb year is an lncl!caUon of t
ing a dance. . imponancc of lhe industry Shl
But I began to catch myself the war. Japan-formerlv the ma
thinking. 'I wonder if his romance source of bulb oupply-has
could be torpedoed?' or What course, been cut off and dealers ha
would he think if I suddenly hung turned increasingly to South Lot
one on him?—I mean a kiss, not ,ia,ia f0r nu, product Terrebon
a punch or What would happen I and piaquemlr.c parishes constlhi
if I asked him who was the major the principal section where the bul
I saw his girl tete-a-tete-ing with have bcen found l0 row aucre,
j on the Sunset Strip the other day? fUuv
' begtm to happen, A breeding program on East
to me after playing a chain of 'oth ,llies has b(.(.n underw for so,
er woman roles. It was getting to time at lhe experime
the point where I was afraid to walk Nation ut Louteianft Slate Unlvf
down a dark street with myself.
slty end thousands of seedlings ha
Behind (he Scenes
In Washington
Document Tells
Of Troop Train
ROLL A. Mo, Sept. 26—(U.R)—Dr.
C. V. Mann of the Phelps County . _ __ __________
Historical society has found what1 Choice'.” she said, "It was tire first
probably is the first account of a time in ages I could look my moth
ALL signs now point to a National War Labor Board reeommendn- ,id'' 0,1 a tl0!)P fain. The informa- j er in the eye."
tion that basic wage rates of American industrial labor be raised. tlcn co;l’1 fro.,, a Illinois army The Kelly girl’s return to re-
You can’t find any man or woman in lhe country who will say that .chaplain who rod. witli the 36tli 1 niance and righteousness so touch
BY PETER EPSON
NEA Staff Correspondent
"Can you imagine a meaner dame bePn produced
that was me in ’Show Business.’ would be especlally adaptcd ^ „
,A.,d I sincerely hope that it was as a potled plam. a medlum ste
the end of Nancy Kelly aa a heel." , plant lhat would produce an abU]
It was right after Nancy s per- i dance of flowets. and a larger plat
! I0'™™ 1,1 B"f,ess" th,at with many fWwers. for gardens a.
| Bill Pine and Bill Thomas, the pubj)c djsp|ay
two bright young Paramount pro- with the hBrveat completed grov
| ducers. dragged her out of cine era will now sell the bulbs to loc
j matic chicanery and invested her, buyers. who wi|1 shl them t0 ,
with so many beautiful virtues that Northern and Eastern cities wire
she was thrown kerplunk into the j they will be sold to florists a.
arms of her hero In the final fade- nurserymen for planting in time f
t , next spring's trade.
fn.J ^ h0m; aftCr. lhc! industry, which has been h
S,TS10<!^nK:. °f °amb!fl"s creasing annually, bids fair to I
one of the main sources of agr
cultural revenue in South Louisinr
in years to come.
Before and after they came to
power, Nazis made much of the
propaganda line that the German
nrmy was not "defeated" in the u . - ------_____ , - -----, - - -- ------
last war, but that It htri been on- i “e 01 Kbe ®aOU‘clri’' have a raise, and you can’t find any politician ! Illinois recn... ., on me Frisco rail- ed Pine and Thomas that they cast
wbo wil1 at'gue against wage raises, especially just rend- during the Civil war. her Immediately in "Double Expos-
before an election. A new wage policy would there- At thla lime locomotives ourned ure" as the captivating heroine who
ably be made lhat “they planned it that vvav.“ linv fn,‘ iIc vehicle;; which v/ould a lieck of a time deciding between war world were outlined recently t
- • .... —1._ •• - . _ - - them. - —
derminrd by n small group or de
featlsts in the renr-the so-called
“Rear-Line Swine.*
The fact that the Nazis have
returned to the use of the sub-
let of the “Spirit of the Rear"
would seem to serve in itself to I
remind the Oertnan people of the 1
prospect of mrvltnble defeat in '
this war. Dr. Goebbels has sought,
however, to remove this implica-
tion by telling the Germans that
the Nazis are determined to avoid
a national "stab in the back"
similar to that which the Nazis
'ay took place in the last war
"Even if the happenings of Nov.
9. 1918. were Instigated by only
More Efficient Kitchens
In Store for Housewives
NEW Y ORK, Sept. 26—CUP)—Sorr
Before arguing yourself blue in the face about make the old "40 and 8" of World
„ r s i_ • .......... - . .. .. t i v.
lhe ethics of this maneuver, consider first whethei Wll‘ I l<>o>t like modern pullman., ‘ You v‘‘ no idea what it does for trial designer.
J. Gordon Llpplncott. noted lndtt:
the War Labor Hoard has any right to declare s The chaplain Captain William a glrl” bleathe<1 Mlss Kelly, roll
Soldiers Pinch-Hit In
Arsenal While Training
CAMP ELLIS. 111.. Sept, 26 —fU.R)
Tomorrow’s kitchen will tn, oi
IJOrate many time-saving device
eliminating hundreds of miles Trot
the average 3.000 miles a year cot
ered by women in today's kitchei
he says. The uppermost shelves wi
slide down within easy reach o< ill
shortest woman, corner sinks wi
VJOBODY wants to sec n repetition of the absurd and re®an,ly- -It wns no* 'he front sit
•* x ,.....: , l.,4. ...... ,i tr\ ___* nation that brought victory for h.
trajric notion thtit a man of 40 is "too old” to >rct
work. Nobody defends the ousting of a Willing, active and
callable man of 60 just because he’s 60. But if these men
cannot work they must be supported.
The problem is only part of a bitefter one. But it is
one more reason why jrovemment and industry and labor
should quickly compose their differences and pull together
in harness toward the poal of “jobs for all."
new wage-raising policy, under the laws and exceu- u Han ; ui nt nl, i-, vuiOi i.i. ing her big brown eyes.
tive orders which set it up. A. curbstone opinion „ ---
would seem to be that the board does have the 1", 1 from Sl Louis t0
Edson authority, but lake a look at some of the arguments' Ro1 u 1,le m(" WCIe bound for
In the first place, the board’s authority extend. 1,011 W.vman. not far from the pres-
until six months after the end of the wtir. as declared by the Prrsi- cut Fort Leonard Wood, where the
dent or Congress. That means not just the end of the war against clc> 36th m intent limped prevent
Germany, but the end of the war against Japan. tile secession or Missouri to the _____
TTNDER Executive Order 9017, setting up the board it is charged ‘°Uth' I—Two companies of Camp Eilis d'i:'ZP spn<'e heretofore lost, 111
; skt" Tt\T
the*ai>nrnvrl nf tn.,,„, „ u !,he bl,ard ,lself has trequently taken the position that any labor Ulc chaplain ion of tlie trip. I ln« Ior overseas and as essential Electric lions will be almost a net
m in ” the r i "mprnb,e °H' dlsP°te, even *"1 strike in a confetti plant, is most certain to 'have ti "At Frank’ln v, were switeheo war workel's- " wa? annouived by f“ ty "'e swing to syn
mans. the notoe... ----------- detrimental effect upon the war effort. to U e ,,n he •?, sl ,! Colonel John S. Sullivan, camp thetic fabrics. Washing machine
It is a question, however, whether this situation would be equally ,n. 1 f ^ L CP'n"1 vommandei- ' will be sold in tandem, with dryer
unrth* frc‘ °f -he '''a‘ ‘,n ?“r°Pe’ To War Labor Board Chair- ’ 11„, T ! n Ordered recently to the Iowa 1 to 1)lovklr’ f°’ drying one hatch r
man William H. Davis, this V-E Day is even more significant than 1 11 llad cxc,uclpUn8 | ordnance plant near Budin-to” ! cl°W>es while another is being wai
election day, because it is more imminent and because after V-E P,ti(surc ldbl over it. The men 1 ’ Buiim.to .i
Day the country will have a divided economy—part war economy werc penned in box cars like dro-
and part a deliberate effort to convert to peacetime production. vrr’s ft, k on its way to the slaugh
mam. the Cologne newspa) er
Westdoutseher Beobschter declared
brought victory for he
enemy, but the war weakness of
the home-front. We must recall
tills fart in talking now to the
stream of refugees and repatriated
people."
It’s about time for the bipr fish enupht this sum-
met to stop prowiup.
Why is it men like to brag about how bad they were
when growing up?
plant, neat Burlington., ’ rloules wm:e another is being wash
the two units of quartermaster j ed‘ 'ne'bs will be eliminated an
service companies, totaling almost ' bacte,ia l'1 foods will be killed b
... ____ , , „ .400 men. have been learning how use °r ul'r!)-violet and lnfrn-re
pHERE is one field in which the board might be limited. This dimes ‘ \ '°' °f space was to handle and stole all types of rays’
M.nmvhi, „ „ . , through the fact that the board has no discretion in making any ft7'h r ” 1 ,erf,wi,s not 8 ,cIua^ munitions in preparation for the
!SKT~!5 “r.-rssr'.rrr*:I;fflsrs £ “3L5 'nsri’SSSL?
“tsrirru. „.;«r
ina on sap, '-Bion. Mu, Ite relieve , mh«, labor .hortaae n,
The same principle is restated in Executive Order 9328 of April 8 , uent interv;i,s of steeP Wades.
— r....,,_____ ,,, niji ,, o, «0 nerve,,. „,nn ih,. . ...n,.
denblatt. In an article headed
"Against the ’Lcnppengelst'." ln-
veiptied against the "professional
pessimists" it said were hamper-
ing the German war effort.
POLITICAL
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Blue tokens won’t be good after Oct. 1. Use tliem up.
bouse wives, or you’ll have the blues.
the arsenal.
Look and Learn
Shaving the heads of women collalmrationists may
have ft good effect. We know some mothers who hope itia,ld lbev enjoy bringing about
will make burr haircuts unpopular.
Down Memory Lane
ed the expression Etannen»l«t"" 1943, d,rectln« no fur,her increases in wages or salaries, except to , . , ,, ,v ..... *- --
the Hamburg newsnS Ci?W"H T,?*!1 subs,and«rd‘ii ot living or to compensate for rises in the cost pai,lf"llv ”,0'v: but when the heights
characterizes" | ! 1 « 1,.vi"« Ji,n‘ >• I941> *o May 1, 1942. as set forth in the Utile , We,e Hlned‘ aIld lb<’ »lown grade
naracierizes the sort of people Steel Formula. reached, a rate of speed at times
who ate always sitting behind the' These orders took like a tight fence—with an open gate almost 'attained, calculated to lead lo the----
7de? leijddinu Q95nP/nHoton C°a a Tily dash off “ now ^’""ve Suspicion that at the rate and over I 1. What famous American sea-
Stalrilizat^n poUcy50 d °"d declarmg some,hing eise to be Ult sllcb a track we could soon be land- | man was on:e vice-admiral nf
.. . _ _ __ 1,11 111 a country at suites climate, the Russian fleet?
* where secceaalon had Its birthplace
Ppfrpchpr fnnr^P^ llrnprl sut‘ P^tgtutluate work, refresher and where, we hoped. It was destined
IXUIIUJIICI vvlil jCj Uiycu | courses or study club courses to soon to have its burial Then we
For Discharged Dentists revlew lbr advances made ■•) c*»u- wouw go up. up. winding around
shortage nt The Tribune is authorized
1 announce the candidacies of
following individuals, subject
fhe general election Nov. 7;
t<
Mu
tt
Democratic Ticket
front lines waging a paper war,
depriving the soldiers of what Is
due them, ami who stream when
things get bad. Such people
Any no’ rather than ’yes" to life,
their own ruin either through deeds ,
or words.
Sept. 26. 1934
Stall* fair honors were claimed by several Canadian
county 4-H club members, John Matthews, El Reno, won
:t trip to the American Royal livestock show in Kansas
City as a dairy judge. Byron McKee, Yukon, was the high-
jmint judge among dairy exhibitors. Mildred Von Tungeln
won second place with her entry of White Leghorns in
the poultry division.
Mrs. Mary Patterson of Oklahoma City assumed her
duties as welfare adjuster for the Canadian county FKRA
organization today, succeeding Mrs. Verona Pangburn, who
is being transferred to the Oklahoma City FKRA office.
El Reno highschool sophomores elected their class of-
ficer.s for the next school year Wednesday, naming Joe
Wallace president, Virginia Devitt vice president and Vir-
ginia Miller secretary-treasurer. Streeter Stewart and Miss
Ruth Hessenflow were chosen class sponsors.
"They are professional no" sav-
ers. They are everywhere, among
all classes and In both sexes.
"In peace time we called them
’professional pessimists.’ In bright
days they are of no importance,
tut in the oark days they are
flourishing, it is they who. in
Enr Stale Representative:
E. R. BARNHART
„ .. . For County Sheriff:
2. How many matches are in a1 .. ... ..
standard book? i HORACE II. CLAPPER
3 Romance languages art* de- I For County Surveyor:
rived from what language?
Ian dental practice while they were mountain gorges until one would’ 4 Against what is a man con- KILL ALEXANPF.R
CHICAGO. Sept. 26—(U R>—Estab- occupied wlth war emergency proc- lwve u watch the trees closely to j tending when he "fights wind- F,,r County Attorney:
lishment of ‘‘reuesiier courses" by
local dental societies for discharged
members of the army and navy
dental corps is recommended in an
editorial appearlnt In the Journal
of the American Dental association
tice.” detemine if we moved at all.
Men now in service, the editorial Ted: over 35.000 troqps each
states, will not have had the bene- mt lth nre carr*ed over the same
fit of practice and nmnv will not rolul 011 which Chaplain Hargh
have made provision for entering nlld bls ,nen traveled during the
.......... ^ ^ ^ private practice. clv11
thinking first of the contents of j for SePtPmber The Journal said the council on
their own trunks, forget to keep “8o far as emergency war meas- dental association has appointed I . .. .
the supply line going. They fright- llres ln the clinical aspects of war a committee on post war educa- L6SSOH ID tnQllSn
on worried wives of soldiers with | dentistry are concerned," the edi lional planning which i, preparing-----
their gloomy words. They will toll j 'orial states, "mast of the men in I a questionnaire to be sent u> nil! WORDS OFTEN MIsuqFD
c workman over a glass of beer' service will be far in advance of dentists ln the armed forces. Thr
that his work won’t do any good , the civilian practitioner ln the war, questionnaire will ask an expression
anymore. The ythlnk they know Phase’of dental practice, but there I of desires and ambitions for the
everything better, but. ln fact, they will be many who will wish to pur- post-war era.
know nothing." -
mills?"
5. What
is an incendiary?
ANSWERS
1. John Paul Jones, at the re-
quest of Catherine the Great
2 20.
3. Latin.
| 4. Against imaginary evils.
5. One who maliciously or wlll-
| ingly sets fire to a building or
, other property.
ROY M. FAUBION
For County Treasurer:
A. T. “Cap” MARCH
For Commissioner. Disk No. 3:
R. G. COURTNEY
Republican Ticket
For County Sheriff:
JACK SMITH
OIGN of the Oermah defeat psy- )
^ chology for some time has been
Private Breger Abroad
•Mrs. Ethel Shepard, 101 North Hoff avenue, is spend-
inp a two-week vacation at Carlsbad and other points
of interest in New Mexico. *
Appointment of S. Boyd Wilson, member of the ex-
ecutive committee of El Reno post No. 34, as American _____„
Legion commander of Canadian county was made today hy rtwnts.
Marion Woodworth, Kingfisher, sixth district commander '
the tendency of many Germans to I
convert their currency into articles
of real value.
Last week the Stockholm N.va
Dagligt Allenhania reported a new
Nazi move to curb this tendency.
It said Nazi authorities had issued
an order forbkiing the sale until
after the war ot “tpys, fancy-
goods. needlework, artificial flowers,
berfumes, gold end silverwares,
stamps, carpets, sports articles,
luxury furs and musical tnstru-
!
Ebtr Dalton of Pittsburg, Tex., returned home today | Problem O DaV
after a visit of several days with his brother. Tom Dalton I_____
and Mrs. Dalton, southeast of El Reno
Mrs. Ralph Cornelius. Muskogee, who has been a guest
for the past three days of Mrs. Frank Korr. 921 South
Uofi avenue, went to Norman today for a visit with hei
daughter, Miss Mary Grace, a student in ?he University
of Oklahoma, before returning to her home.
Miss Mabel Peeler of Fort Worth, Tex., has assumeo
a temporary position in fhe accounting department at the
Rock Island office building here.
Smith and Jones are rival base-
ball pitchers. Smith pitches an
overage of 7 strikes out of every
10 pitches, and Jones puti over
5 i trikes for every 10 pitches. When
a total of 4 strikes has been made
by the two pitchers, how many
times has each thrown the ball?
ANSWER
40 times fexplnnatlon—Add 7 10
and 5 10; divide 48 by the re-
sult.
not say. His house is equally as I
good as yours." Say. "His house!
is ns good ns yours.” or. "His j
: house and yours are equally good." i
OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED
Aide-de-camp. Pronounce ncl-de-
knmp. first a ns In aid. e as in
me, second a as in a in, principal
a -cent on first syllable.
OFTEN MISSPELL FD: Bizarre
(fantastical). Bazaar (market
place).
SYNONYMS: Enlarge, augment,
expand, extend.
WORD, STUDY: Use a word*
fhre times nnd It is yours % Let
us lnciea-e ou: vocabulary by mas-
tering one wo*d each day. Today’s
word: INCISIVE; having the qual-
ity of cu’ting; sharp; acute; sar-
castic; biting. It was an incisive,
high voice."
Sally’s Sallies
Bv Srolt
Lieutenant in Comm^d
Of His Former Teacher
“Sergeant, why isn’t this man’s head polished?”
ANSON. Tex., Sept 26 — (UP) —
I Fit st Lieutenant James C. Hestand
i write; home tint lie has achieved
the ambition of every school boy. i
Hestand is equipment officer at
a heavy bombardment base in
England, nnd under him Is Ser-
geant James F Beaver, who used
to'be Hestand's highsehool teacher.
Hestand says that he Isn't being
too hard on hls former teacher.
'Voo’ve seen enough movies to know what to do in a aitu
ation like this"
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Dyer, Ray J. The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 53, No. 178, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 26, 1944, newspaper, September 26, 1944; El Reno, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc920506/m1/4/: accessed April 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.