The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 64, No. 298, Ed. 1 Wednesday, February 15, 1956 Page: 4 of 6
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Four
The El Reno (Okla.) Daily Tribune
Wednesday, February 15, 195
The El Reno Daily Tribune
A Blue Ribbon Newspaper Serving a Blue Ribbon Community
Issued daily except Saturday from 201 North Rock Island Avenue
and entered as second-class mail matter under the act of March 3, 1879.
RAY J. DYER
Editor and Publisher
DEAN WARD JAMES M. ROGERS
Business Manager Managing Editor
HARRY SCHROEDER
Circulation and Orfice Manager
MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Associated Press is entitled exclusively to the use for republication
of all the local news printed in this newspaper, as well as all OB news
dispatches.
Land of Shadows
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MEMBER
OKLAHOMA PRESS
ASSOCIATION
MEMBER
SOUTHERN NEWSPAPER
PUBLISHERS ASS N.
DAILY
SUBSCRIPTION RATES BY
BY CARRIER
One Week...................$ .25
One Month___________________$ 1.10
One Year____________________$11.00
Elsewhere in State—One Year..
Including Sale Tax
Wednesday, Feb. 15, 1956
MAIL IN CANADIAN AND
ADJOINING COUNTIES
Three Months________________$1.75
Six Months___________________$3.50
One Year_______________ $6.50
$8.50-Out of State____$11.00
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The peace of God shall guard your hearts and your thoughts. Philip-
pians. 4:7. Deeds start with thoughts. We can guard our thoughts and
be at peace when we expell unworthy thoughts.
Wa
Progress Report
CTEEL is the great underspinning of the American economy.
When the steel industry plans—as it has—the biggest ex-
pansion program in its history, the signals are up for new
peaks of national growth in the years just ahead.
In recent decades we have entered the “age of light
metals” and the “age of plastics." But through all this we
have never left the “age ot steel,” nor are we likely to. Aside
from the sources of power, steel is the most fundamental sub-
stance of our industrial civilization.
Thus it is no accident that the steel companies, watching
the rising curves of U.S. population and general industrial
output, are now projecting the addition of some 15 million
tons to the nation's steel producing capacity.
The increase will come at the rate of about five million
tons a year, a new high in expansion. The average for the
first 10 postwar years was about 3.5 million tons added to
capacity each year.
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KHRUSHCHEV
1) • V. '
NEA Service, Inc
YESTERDAY was Shrove Tues-
day and celebrations in many
cities and towns lasted until
midnight. New Orleans and Mo-
bile have celebrations of long
standing with much pomp and
ceremony. Mardi Gras, as the
day is known to many for whom
the celebration has no church
connections is simply a fancy
name for several days of merry-
making, the what, whay, when
and how ocme being a nebulous
for which many have no con-
cern.
There was a time when on
Shrove Tuesday all the people
gathered at the church where
they made confession and re-
ceived absolution of their sins.
In many instances there was but
one priest to hear confessions
and many persons were required
to wait all day and some far into
the night to be heard. It came to
be the custom for little cakes to
be passed among the waiting
ones to break the monotony of
their long watch. Hence the name
Pancake Tuesday. The merry-
making stems from the fact that
Mardi Gras is the day before
Ash Wednesday which is the be-
ginning of Lent.
Charles Scanland, chief steward |
at the federal reformatory, was
guest speaker Tuesday for the Hill
Toppers home demonstration club. '
Mr. Scanland discussed “Meat
Selection and Cookery” at the ■
morning meeting in the home of!
Mrs. William McGuire, Reforma-
tory circle.
Mrs. Harry VonTungeln, presi-
dent, conducted the business ses-
sion.
Guests were Mrs. James P. I
Briggs and Mrs. A. E. Walsh, who
became members of the club, and
Mrs. Charles Scanland.
Others attending were Mrs. Eu-1
gene Fitch, Mrs. John Waller, Mrs. i
Howard Hamilton, Mrs. Harvey
Prater, Mrs. Ralph Thompson,
Mrs. L. D. Murphy, Mrs. W. G. j
Byrd, Mrs. A. F. Zent, Mrs. John
Irvine, Mrs. Loren Spurr, Mrs.
Emery Whit acre, Mrs. Herb Thom- j
as, Mrs. Murvel Hinricksen, Mrs.
Bert Gresham, Mrs. Forest Allen,
Mrs. B. E. Durham and Mrs. Hu-
bert Rahey.
Mrs. VonTungeln, Reformatory
circle, will be hostess for the
March 13 meeting.
AND it should have occasioned no surprise that on the very
** day the American Iron and Steel institute made this an-1
nouncement through Benjamin Fairless, its president. General
Motors disclosed that it plans to spend one billion dollars this
year for expansion. It was in effect perfectly timed confirma-
tion of the steel industry's judgment that the immediate fu-
ture is bright.
We hardly need be reminded that the automotive industry
consumes about 20 percent of all the steel made.
Obviously this is a hopeful story that deserves to be spelled
out in much more than the cold terms of tonnage figures and
dollar expansion. YVhat happens in these basic fields means
a great deal to ordinary Americans everywhere.
In an article reviewing the meaning of this expansion, the
magazine Steelways shows what its impact has been on just
one group—the hundreds of thousands who made the steel
that serves*so many millions of others.
Jusf^i Corpse at TwiligtiTf JMj
By Robert Martin
|THE STORY: James Bennett,
private investigator, found the body
of my shirt collar, feeling the
warm dampness, and 1 drove fast
of Mrs. Alice Osborn, a widow, down into the- dark valley.
when he went to her place in an
investigation of the death of her
late husband Frank. Prior to her
death she had signed a release, al-
lowing an autopsy by the industrial
welfare commission to determine
if Frank's death was due to indus-
trial causes. Sheriff Abner Corn-
wallis vows he won't permit the
There was a light in Dr. Ord-
way Vincetti’s office, gleaming
murkily behind dusty panes. Ap-
parently he was still up. I had
.net him and his combination nurse
and secretary in April when I’d
been working on another case
which had also involved a widow.
GINCE 1945, the steelworker’s average hourly earnings have I autopsy and trios to get the release lie was the only doctor I knew in
LJ r-"-~ «•' 1 n *- »o ii ---------" • - •vrom Bennett. Steel City. I rapped softly on the
climbed from $1.18 to $2.46. He averages around $103 a,
week today, and in addition gets paid holidays, insurance, and j * * !
a pension. With this increased purchasing nower double I
Likely as not he has a car and a house full of appliances ling the wrong move, son."
made from the very material he helps to manufacture. The' ’All right. I've made it.
expansion of his industry has brought with it notable expan- move now.
sion in his personal standard of living. As Steelways points
out, today’s steelworker enjoys better living than many a
plant owner 50 years ago.
This is what the cold statistics of industrial expansion are
really all about. They translate remarkably into the warm,
typically American story of steady human betterment.
It’s your
Illinois police caught a man who had stolen 150 pounds
of frozen foods. The big thaw will come while he’s locked up.
I he front end of a Michigan motorist’s car was smashed
when he hit a deer. One case where it wotdd have been better
to pass the buck.
The price for this year’s maple syrup has already been
set in an Ohio town. It’ll make some folks smile and others
boil.
Driving too fast is what speeds up the accidents that over-
take you on slippery streets.
The average cloud weighs 300,000 pounds. That must in-
clude the silver lining.
Down Memory Lane
He must have given the bar-
tender some sign, because Roy ’
came from around the bar, wip-
ing his hands on his apron. “What's
the matter, Abner?" lie asked.
“I’m making you a deputy.
Roy,” he said grimly. "I'm going
to arrest this man. If he resists,
use force.” He gave me his wolfish
grin.
I looked at Roy. He looked at
me. Then he said, “Aw, why
don't you let him arrest you? I
know he’s drunk, but he’s the
sherilf, and I don't want no trouble
with him.”
“Good night. Roy,” I said.
He hesitated, glanced at the
sheriff and then back at me. 1
backed to the archway. “Good
night, Sherilf," I called.
He was talking into the phone
on the bar, but he looked up, his
thin, dissolute old face cadaverous
with shadows from the overhead
Steel City. I rapped softly on
I door. In a moment it was opened
| by the nurse.
“The doctor is out. What do
you—?” She recognized me ihen.
"Oh, Mr. Bennett. Come in." She
{stepped aside.
Through an open door I saw the
doctor’s office. A light burned
un the desk. Behind me the worn-
un closed the door. "What's the
matter with your neck?” she ask-
ed.
"Bullet nicked me,” I said, turn-
ing to face her. 1 touched the hand-
kerchief tucked beneath the back
of my shirt collar. “Maybe you'd
better look at this for me?”
"Of course. Come in here.” I fol-
lowed her into the office and sat
by the desk in a chair she indicat-
ed. With gentle lingers she remov-
ed the bloody ■ handkerchief.
“Close,” she murmured. "Just
missed ihe spine."
* * *
I WENT to the hotel. Before I
went up to my room I took the
autopsy release signed by Alice
Osborn and placed it, envelope and
all, in a hotel envelope which I
sealed and stamped, addressed to
Austin O’Connor and marked PER-
SONAL. As I dropped it into the
light. I waved a hand at him, a lobby mail box I thought bleakly
gesture of farewell. He slammed --
that it was something I should
have done many hours earlier.
In the morning my neck was
stiff and throbbed <Udly. I swal-
lowed two of the green capsules
Dr. Vincetti’s nurse had given
me and took a bath in the tub.
1 put on a yellow polo shirt, gray
llanncl slacks and a gray tweed
jacket and left the room.
My car was ready, I left the
garage. Two miles from the last
traffic light I turned off the high-
way and stopped on a side road.
With the blade of a pocket knife
I dug into the hole in the seat
and after a few probes I struck
Ihe chunk of lead and dug it out.
1 gazed at it in my palm and
I knew that it was not a .22 cal-
iber fired from a kid's target gun.
A .22 can kill, of course, if it hits
the right spot, as Alice Osborn
very well knew, if she knew any-
thing. But the bullet I held was
high power, about a 30-30 I guess-
ed.
(To Be Continued)
T ENT is not a period of pen-
A-4 ance done for previous sins.
Lent is a period of self-examina-
tion and preparation for Easter
and the doing without certain
foods or pleasures are not be-
cause these things are in them-
selves wrong but that the denial
will remind us of the season and
what is at hand.
Whether one observes Lent as
set forth'by the liturigal denomi-
nations or in some other fashion
takes himself apart and views
each piece separately and then
as a whole, the result must in-
evitably be the same. We’re
bound to be disappointed to a
greater or less degree which
may be the reason many scorn
the practice.
But for Christian and non-
Christian alike it is a good thing.
As one goes through the days of
Lent many of the little petty an-
noyances fall by the wayside.
Our friends become dearer and
our criticism less sharp. We
have a different view of life and
here’s the reason. Everybody
else looks good by comparison
with ourselves, if we’re honest,
and being less than truthful with
oneself is too ridiculous for con-
templation.
Every year I am asked why I
observe Lent. It is my personal
spring housecleaning and it is a
good thing it comes earlier some
years than others, else it would
be too late. Try it. You too will
like it.
Dallas Ray Daggs, paintei
Reno route 3, died at his hon
morning following a short il
Mr. Daggs was born Ap
1894, at Arlington, Kan., and
to Canadian county in 1902
Kansas, living in the southw
part of the county ^tntii he
to his present address ab<
years ago.
Survivors include his ir
Mrs. Ollie Daggs of Blackw
daughter, Mrs. Lawana
South Gate, Calif.; a grand)
ter, Linda White, also of
Gate; three brothers, Franci
Daggs, Ninnckah, William
nald Daggs, Blackwell, and
Rodney Daggs, El Reno ro
and two aunts, Mrs. Lillie P
grast, Hepler, Kan., and
Bertie Bullock, of the home^
Funeral services will be h
10 a m. Friday in the
chapel with the Rev. Jack C
pastor of the First Baptist e
officiating. Burial will be a
p.m. in the Blackwell cer
under direction of the Wils
neral home.
Mrs. Bill Wiggins
Guest at Meeting
N. S, Bollinge
Rites Thursda
Mrs. Bill Wiggins was a special
guest Tuesday afternoon when Mrs.
Olin McNew, southwest of El Reno,
entertained members of the Young
Matrons club.
Plans were made by the group
to attended the Elks’ Auxiliary
luncheon and style show on Feb. 21
at the Elks’ home.
Present were Mrs. Harry Hale,
Mrs. Don Stevenson, Mrs. Melvin
Foster, Mrs. Clyde Kinkade, Mrs.
James P. Jobe, Mrs. Russell Cum-
mings, Mrs. B. R. McCain, Mrs.
Robert Nichols and Mrs. W. D.
Feddersen.
Hostess for the Feb. 28 meeting
will be Mrs. Nichols, 517 South El
Reno.
* * *
RETURNS HOME
Mrs. Tressie Wage, 301 North
Macomb, has returned home from
a trip to Salinas and El Centro,
Calif. While there she visited her
son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and
Mrs. Gordon Snodgrass and daugh-
ters, Lois Ann and Mary Sue.
Mrs. Snodgrass and daughters ac-
companied Mrs. Wage to El Reno
for a visit.
N. S. “Sam” Bollinger,
farmer of 610 North Chocta)
at his home Tuesday night
ing a long illness.
Mr. Bollinger, born Dec. I
at Farmington, Mo., came
Reno in 1945 from Kennetl
after having lived in Oklah)
various times in the past.
He was a member of the
church at Clarkton, Mo.
Survivors include three
ters, Mrs. Francis Lorenze
West London; Mrs. Norval )
Oklahoma City; Mrs. Fred
Minco; a son, Homer Bo
Midwest City; four grande
and five great-grandchildrer
Funeral services will be ]
the First Baptist church i
p.m. Thursday with the Rev
Hodges, Oklahoma City,
ting. Burial will be in the E
cemetery under direction
Wilson funeral home.
Japanese Vessel
Hunt Korean SI
Simmons To Aid
In Music Clinic
Hospital Notes
Indians Defeat
Pirates by 56-43
William Roy Mowrc, 311 North
Evans, entered Park View hospital
Feb. 5 for medical treatment and
was dismissed Tuesday.
Mrs. A. J. Batkins, El Reno re-
formatory, and son, born Feb. 8 in
Park View, were dismissed Tues-
day.
William Lester Connally, 515
North Evans, entered Park View
Jan. 30 for medical treatment and
was dismissed Tuesday.
Henry McCann, 1006 West Lon-
don, entered the Laughton clinic
Tuesday for medical treatment.
Feb. 15, 1936
J^RS. C. E STRATTON of Yukon has been appointed director
of the social service department of Canadian county.
Hashing a brand of basketball which far eclipsed any of
their previous performances this season. El Reno’s title hungry
Indians romped through the Central Cardinals of Oklahoma
City in a mid-state conference game here. The score was 42-18.
., Mrs. Anna B. Korn of El Reno was reelected president of
the Oklahoma Council of Democratic Women at the annual
meeting in Oklahoma City.
Walter P. Marsh, El Reno highschool principal, announced Iblinkers anrt big yellow and black
the names of 77 students who have been nominated for mom- *'Kns- 1 braked at the white line
bership in the Oklahoma Honor society and (lu*ifully looked Ixith way*.
Arnold Sawallisch owns an electric footnad which cots the \\ ,wus, *|!on..,lhat ‘h<>, wi,,do'vi
iob done The nthor niohi w u J U n w I ‘ *’us . spNntered beside my face ami
hours he arm.ceH Kht fl been asleoP sevcral something fire-hot caressed the
afire W3S aroused by smoke and discovered the bed was back of my neck. In shock and
the phone down, started around the
bar, tripped over a slool and
sprawled to the floor. Roy ran to
help him up. I turned and walked
out.
I drove at a sedate 40 miles
an hour, expecting to hear the
wail of a siren behind me. But
I didn't.
Ten miles from Beech Tree there
was an intersection where the
highway crossed another. It was a
four-way stop, with warning red
Rainbow Hues
Answer to Today's Puzzle
. •**' ? Jollnf?n- 1201 East Oak. left Saturday for a week’s
visit with relatives in Junction City, Ark.
AN Demons came to El Reno Thursday night to dem-
onstrate the most unorthodox brand of basketball ever
witnessed in the Tribal gymnasium during this or any other
season but it wasn t effective enough to topple El Reno’s ttn-
defeated Indians. Ihe Tribe was ahead 22 19 when the last
ot Duncan s weird tactics had been unfolded.
. tnUXiy HSSe£S°r Sam Hulbert ^1 make a delayed trip to
g“»e'«nd sch.0<>1 Wednesday, Feb. 20. to levy assessments,
aw ^ay-Hulbert postponed a scheduled trip
to thi district this week because of a snowstorm
QJ\/eiI)VVV^ K i*ub ^i°yed a 1 o'clock luncheon followed
m nemn«,b1^ hd7 party Wednesday afternoon in the
Slaughter 703 West Wade. Mrs. Florence
ajeais and Mrs. Slaughter, who were observing their birth-
day anniversaries, were presented with gifts from the group.
of Christian Service of the Ellison
n/ Mrc M^0dllchurc,« Thursday evening in the home
CorK Wa"S' wi,h Mrs' Marsha"
ACROSS
1 White and
blue’s partner
4 Gray
8 Pastel shade
12 Age
13 Monster
14 Algerian city
15 Knight’s titie
16 Repeat
18 African flies
20 Renovate
3 Reckless
fellow
4 Riding beast
5 Curved
molding
6 Ascended
7 Soak flax
8 Orifices in
skin
9 Persia
10 Boy’s
nickname
S:
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n
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27 Honorable 42 Odd (Scot.)
............ mentions 43 Fruit
21 Scottish river 11 Was cognizant 28 Norse god 44 Ireland
22 Japanese 17 Expunger 29 Denomination 46 Elevator
outcasts 19 Singing voice 31 Crowns Inventor
fear I jolted forward against the
wheel and pressed the gas pedal,
The automatic shift zoomed me
across the intersection. I swung
off the road, slammed the brake
pedal and stopped on hard sand
beneath a towering pine tree. I
ihut off the motor. I put my fin- I
gers to the back of my neck, fell !
the warm wetness and brought
them away, bloody under the dash
light. I stared dumbly for a mo-
ment, and then got out a handker-
chief, wiped my fingers and then I
pressed it against Ihe back qt my |
neck.
A car went past me, coming up j
from Steel City in the valley be j
low. It slowed and slopped at
the intersection and then roared
on. A woman's laughter drifted
hack to me on the cool June
breeze. Then silence, and sudden [
ly 1 was afraid of the night and !
the black hills around me. I tucked
the handkerchief bcucath the back ,
24 Prayer ending 23 P*Pes
26 African 24 Stirs
antelopes 25 Plateau
27 Kind of lcttuce26 Heroic feats
30 Dedicate
32 Next to
34 Husband of
Isis
35 Amatory
36 Chemical salt
37 Lawyers (ab.)
39 Rave
40 Gaelic
41 Lett coin
42 Musical drama
45 More
33 Rail birds 47 Revise
38 Bridge holding 48 Corded fabrics
40 Sea eagles 50 Shads of
41 German songs brown
clamorous
49 Put back in
office
51 Poem
52 Unusual
53 Sour
54 Bite
55 War god
56 Cape
57 Sanctified
ones (ab.)
DOWN
1 Repose
2 Discord
goddess
1
!
1
II
5
i
9
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9
A
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6
it
7
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31
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(Continued From Page One)
I Simmons entered his reserves into
action as they outscored El Reno
16-13 but the damage had been
done. Also breaking into ihe In-
J ciians scoring were speedy regular
I Gib Gholston who finished with six
and junior guard Glen Hadlock who
had two. Both played fine defens-
ively and in handling the ball for
the Warriors. Three reserves, Pat
McCabe Junior Whipple, and John
Porter divided a total of six even-
ly-
Gary finished high for the Pirates
es he tried Farris for top game
honors with 15. Starters Lloyd
Meador and Jerry Cox each hit
eight to aid Gary in the Buccaneer
attack.
With sophomore Billy Harris
again showing the way with scor-
ing in the double figures, coach
Kenneth Kamm's "B” squad stav-
ed off a last quarter Putnam City
rally to down Ihe Pirates 43-38.
Harris hit a total of 14 points to
take the games top laurels while
teammates Glen Hill and Jim
Mowery were each hitting eight
and Billy Craig was adding five
more. Pirate guard Jim Wood pok-
ed through seven and Bob Watson
and John Miller each scored six
to pace the hustling home team.
The Warriors will return home
Friday night to meet a strong pack
of Lawton Wolverines In what will
I he a chance for vcnegcnce and
also their last conference tilt of
j the season. The Wolverines upset
| the Tribe 45-44 earlier in the season
I and only last season beat the In-
dians on their home court which
was an almost unheard of feat in
the small EHS gym.
W. Lee Simmons, minister of
music and eduration of the El
Reno First Baptist Church, will
be one of the instructors at an
area music clinic to be held at
the First Baptist Church, Guth-
rie, each evening from Feb. 20
through 24.
The clinic is co-sponsored by
the music department of the Cen-
tral Baptist association, composed
of Canadian. Blaine, Kingfisher
and Logan counties, and the par-
ticipating Baptist churches: Beth-
el, Centerview, Central, Coyle,
Crescent, Hopewell. Mulhall, No-
ble Avenue (Guthrie) and First
Baptist Church of Guthrie. It is
the first of several such area clin-
ics scheduled for the various areas
of the association, the purpose of
of which is to train choir members
and church and departmental lead-
ership in the field of church music.
The clinic is open to- interested
members of all the participating
churches.
Simmons will teach a class on
“Music Fundamentals and Sight-
singing”. Another class, which will
be a workshop for departmental
superintendents, choristers and ac-
companists, will be taught by John
Edward Carlson, Oklahoma City.
Supervising the week’s activities
will be Bob DeViney, Guthrie, of
the host church.
Each evening’s program will in-
clude two 45-minute class periods
and close with a 30-minute com-
bined session during which anthem
materials will be surveyed. At the
same timie choir and congregation-
al choral techniques will be dis-
cussed. A “sermon in song” will
be featured at the Wednesday night
service Feb. 22 under direction of
Carlson. The Rev. F. Clyde Aik-
man is pastor of the host church.
TOKYO, Feb. 15 — w — h
armed coast guard ships fro
pan hunted the seas today
Korean vessel that battled
two Japanese fishing boats
pirate-like skirmish off Tsu
island.
Crews of the three fishin
sels fought with pistols am
knives yesterday. Authorities
ed the skirmish might fan ih
tility between the two natior
RUGS CLEANI
The Patented Hild V
Phone 11 or 58
CRYSTAL lUNUI
(LEANT:
Chas. C. ‘Sonny* Kcgelm
V.F.W. Post No. 3
Important Businesi
Meeting
Thursday at 7:30
POST HUT
Members Urged To Atlei
ROYAL VISITORS
COLOMBO, Ceylon. Feh. 15-W—
The government announced today
Queen Mother Elizabeth and per-
haps Princess Margaret will visit
this Asiatic country next spring.
SOVIET PREDICTION
LONDON, Feb. 15—)yp—The Com-
munist radio predicted today Rus-
sia will have an atomic power sta-
tion capable of generating 2-mil-
lion to 2W-million kilowatts of elec-
tricity in operation by 1961.
FREE
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Dyer, Ray J. The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 64, No. 298, Ed. 1 Wednesday, February 15, 1956, newspaper, February 15, 1956; El Reno, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc920550/m1/4/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.