The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 64, No. 101, Ed. 1 Sunday, June 26, 1955 Page: 4 of 10
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Four
The El Reno (Okie.) Daily Tribune
Sunday, June 26, 1955
The El Reno Daily Tribune
A Blue Ribbon Newspaper Serving A Blue Ribbon Community
Issued dally except Saturday from 201 North Rock Island Avenue
and entered as second-class mail matter under the act of March 3, 1879
RAT J. DYER
Editor and Publisher
DEAN WARD I-EO D. WARD
Business Manager Managing Editor
HARRY* SC1IROEDER
Circulation and Office Manager
MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Associated Press is entitled exclusively to the use for republlcatlon
of all the local news printed in this newspaper, as well as all (/H) news
dispatches. _
MEMBER MEMBER
OKLAHOMA PRESS drfSSggife SOUTHERN NEWSPAPER
association PUBLISHERS ASS N
daily SUBSCRIPTION RATES BY MAIL IN CANADIAN AND
BY CARRIER ADJOINING COUNTIES
One week „ ___________$ 25 Three months------------*1 75
One Month””.".____________$ MO Six Months------------------$3.50
One Year ___________________$11.00 One Year--------------------$6 r>°
Elsewhere In State-One Year----$8.50-Out of State----$11.00
Including Sales Tax
Sunday, June 26, 1955
T„ the Lord our God belong mercies and forgiveness, though we have
rebelled against him.-Dan. 9:9. God harbors no resentment, he knoweth
our frame he remembereth that wc are dust. _
Still Symbol of Hope
IN the great flush of emotion that attended the close of
1' World war II, the united nations, newly born, became the
IYECKON all coffee cans are
** opened with a key. I can
symbol of hope for a bright new world from which war would
be banished.
After ten of the most turbulent peacetime years in mod-
ern history, the UN is still that symbol. But there is a more
realistic understanding of its limitations.
The UN is above all a forum where men of many lands
may discuss their problems with one another, and their
differences.
Often it has been stressed that the agency gives them this
chance to talk But what is really important is not just that
they can talk but that they want to talk in the UN.
As Waler Lippman has pointed out, no nation has resigned
from the UN and many more would join if they could. Only
Russia boycotted it briefly, returning quickly when it saw
the handicap of being on the outside.
rrqiE UN, of course, is a propaganda sounding board for many
countries, most particularly the Communist lands. But it
is also a unique outlet for the cdmplaintis of small nations
against big. And it is the living embodiment of man’s desire
that nations hereafter shall get along with each other, some-
how. without resort to major war.
In the UN negotiaitons never cease. They may halt for a
time, but they always can be resumed. No diplomat is handed
his passport and ordered home from UN headquarters when
talks break down. Diplomats from all member nations can
take part in discussions, no matter what offenses may be
charged against their countries.
It is not just an association of like-minded peoples, but
of peoples of many political and religious faiths. In this very
basic sense it is a universal organization.
Because it has remained universal through all the titanic
struggles of the cold war, it continues to symbolize men s
hopes for peace. The moment it comes to represent only non-
Communist lands its universality ends and it becomes in
effect a mere alliance.
remember when only sardines
had that kind of opener. Folger’s
coffee cans have a little star on
the strip which winds around
the key. The Red Cross would
like to have 500 of these little
tin strips with the star on in or-
der to get the premium which
goes with. If anyone uses this
brand of coffee and isn't obligat-
ed to give the strip elsewhere
send them to us or leave them
for us at the store where you
buy the coffee. We haven’t asked
the grocers hut feel sure they
will go along with us.
One would think this a gossip
column. One of those silly things
that say “What married woman
was seen drinking a cocktail in
a certain cocktail lounge with a
popular bachelor on the evening
of July 4?” Such delicious mor-
sels of scandal get into some
papers in metropolitan areas but
in this size place everybody
knows nearly everything before
it happens and little if any
makes interesting scandal. Rut
the folks were thrown a curve
in Friday’s column about the
coffee. Have had numerous calls,
from the gals, mind you, only
one from a man about town;
and he didn't divulge his identi-
ty, wanting to know just who the
man is who every morning
kisses his wife goodby and tosses
in a compliment for good meas-
ure.
Mr. Iireger
By Dave Brewer
\
M
/
f m
N
A
: >■
7- • Kirg Ffi-urfi $vr» Im VK'oflJ nghu
Hollywood
Film Shop
Lesson in English
TJOLLYWOOD — (IB — “Davy
Crockett,” said Walt Disney,
the man responsible for it all, “has
come here for a long stay. You
haven’t seen half of it yet.”
Late in June, a weary Davy
Crockett (Fess Parker), just back
from a whirlwind personal appear-
ance tour of 21 American cities,
will step again before Disney cam-
as, coonskin cap, flintlock rifle
near Louis-
WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: Do
not say, “Try and do the work to-
day.” Say, “Try to do the work.”
OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED:
Accent (noun and verb). Stress
the noun on the first syllable, the
verb on the second syllable.
OFTEN MISSPELLED: Eccen-
tric: three c's, no k.
SYNONYMS: Prudent, discreet,
wise, sagacious, provident, wary,
artful, cunning.
WORD STUDY: “Use a word
three times and it is yours.” Let
us increase our vocabulary by
LESS FORGETFUL
DETROIT—UP)—'The number |
motorists locking their keys j
their cars dropped in 1954. Tl
American Automobile Club repot
ed its annual survey of emergent
calls showed only 717,000 calls lj
emergency lock and key servij
compared to 803,000 the year
fore.
“Mommy! Daddy! Lookit the big commercial
Death Has
by Brett Halliday
l«J! Vi I»n HiUn
XXII [side of the house that faced to-
THF, car came to a full stop, ward the bay.
She heard him turn off the igni- Lucy hesitated. There was no
tion and open his door and step place to run to. No use shrieking
out, then he swung the half of for help, as he had pointed out.
the front seat forward away from
her, and she knew he must be
standing there looking in to see
if she had recovered consciousness
yet.
^AKK it easy, curious ones.
I will tell you this; it is worth
consideration and an honest
trial. Sentimentality is coming
back into favor as a boost to
emotional stability and well de-
serves its place there. I believe
the psychiatrists are not thinking
of sticky sentiment, but are of
the opinion that everyone is more
or less sentimental and that it
does no good for one to act as
if he had reason to be ashamed
of it. And so, if you’ve got a nice
wife or a swell husband you'll
be right in line with the times if
you occasionally tell them just
how line you think they are. If
it has been a long time since you
have done this be prepared for
shock treatment. It wouldn't he
fair to spring such on an un-
suspecting spouse, without warn-
ing.
She kept her eyes closed and f]oor wjj^ qje t,eam 0f jjis flash-
tried to make all her muscles ljght on her
limp as she supposed an uncon-j
scions pet son would by guessed, seeing the furniture with
She felt Ins hands on her , , . .. n. . ....
shoulders lifting and pulling her covers in the flickering light,
roughly out, and she moaned bu,1 he „sceme^ to know exactly
faintly and fluttered her eyelids where b? ,was fseiz,ng her
as convincingly as she could, stag-1*™ ?“d fading her lo an open
.i „„ u„ij door into a corridor, and down a
genng on the ground as he held , , ,
her upright when she was out of passage to another door at the rear
the ear. letting her eyes open wide whic.h °Pened on.to a fhght °f
as though she had just recovered w“°den J ePs lead,ing do™l
consciousness^ prinking aw a y hf ^HheTeam h.s’ light
'“Where am 1? What happened? around aU £our sidcs t0 show lhcre
My head hurts dreadfully. Who are were no windows, no other opening
you? I never saw you before.” I means of cgrcss cxcePl UP thc
“Never mind who I am.” He stalrs‘
shook her roughly and shoved her Just s0 >’ou U know for sure
back against the car. ‘You're Lucy how things stand, Ma'am. You're
Hamilton. Mike Shayne's secrc- «onna sit down and write a little
tary >• j note to your boss telling him just
There was only one house vtai-i®"'^ ho,w things are,with >'ou‘
ble. A large, three-story -- a,,d then 1 ,n g0,ng to tle >ou UP
and all, on location
ville, Ky.
Director Norman Foster will be
in command of the Hollywood-on-
the-Ohio production entitled “Leg-
ends of Davy Crockett.” The two-
hour-long film for wide screen and
in Technicolor, eventually will be
completed at Disney’s studio at
Burbank, Cal.
The new film will follow the
same unheard-of distribution pat-
tern the creator of Mickey Mouse
set for his first Crockett film,
“Davy Crockett, King of the Wild
Frontier.” The latter is now being
shown as a single feature in mo-
tion picture theaters at regular ad-
mission prices following two com-
plete runs as a three-part series on
free-of-charge television.
And Jean Lafitte
“ ‘Legends’, ” Disney explained,
“will consist of two one-hour epi-
sodes. We intend to split each into
two parts and so have four half-
hour installments for our televi-
sion show.”
Everybody, of course, knows
what Disney’s first Crockett work
has done to start the craze for
practically any product that bears
the frontiersman’s name — and
^Disney’s.
“I hope it’s a healthy craze,”
library or study, she Disne>\ said‘ Vm"
amazed as everybody, but now that
mastering one word each day. To-
day’s word: TUMULTUOUS; agi-
tated conflicting passion; dis-
turbed. “He was aware of a tu-
multuous rush of emotion.”
Clyde R. Maxey
POLIO, AUTO AND
GENERAL INSURANCE-l
207 E. Woodson--Phone 34; ~
|W
BE SURE YOU BUY THE
Problem a Day
WRIGHT
Lives
Tom can do a piece of work in
4 days, Dick in 5 days, and Harry
in 6 days. If they all work togeth-
er and earn $148, how should the
money be divided?
ANSWER
Tob $60; Dick $48; Harry $40.
Add 1/4, 1/5, and 1/6: divide 37
into 148; multiply ftsult by 15, 12
and 10, respectively.
TYPE OF
AIR COOLER i
Dangers of
Rectal Troubles
ky
•*Ca W'vic«, Uk. *
FREE BOOK—Explains Many
Associated Conditions
While she hesitated, he caught
her roughly and shoved her half
over the windowsill, snarling, “Get
on inside.”
She pulled herself over onto the
fcAPACHty NERVOUSNESS |
STOMACH ■ LOW |
:QNDITIQNSB VITALITY I
LIVER U KlDNfcY I
Disturbance‘J
Models
«CTAL LmEUMATI
lAesctssl
SYMMOASl
Backache, headache, constipation,
dizziness, nausea, abdominal sore-
ness, stomach and intestinal condi-
tions are often caused by Piles, Fis-
As Low As
FREE INSTALLATION
COMPLETE STOCKS .
Of Pumps, Pads, Floats, Copp<]
And Plastic Tubing, Fan Blade!
Etc. I
tula or Colon Troubles. 40-page
FREE BOOK explains the nature of
these ailments. Write today — a
our Davy has been accepted we postcard will do. Thornton aiu^ Mi-
want him to keep marching.” j nor Hospital, Suite 1818, 911 E^Lin-
..... , . ., . . . , .. wood. Kansas City 9, Mo.
Ultimately, though, he said, the _„J_
/ZSlwmwffflt
“SINCE 1910”
Tennessee frontiersman will be re-
placed on the Disney schedule,
r
1/ EEP reading articles in the
magazines about how to
dress up food for picnics. I’m
growing more picnic ‘conscious
every day and when 1 break out
and plan one I will not change
the time honored menu nor its
preparation. I shall prepare in
large quantities, fried chicken,
potato salad, hard boiled eggs
pickled in beet juice. B and B
4 STUTE statesmen on both sides of thc Iron Curtain want to
keep it universal. Especially since the great advances
in nuclear weapons, they feel the insistent pressures of ordi-
nary folk the world over against any course that should plunge
the globe into war again. ,
The UN is their meeting ground. They fear to abandon
it. For to do so would be to admit failure when such an ad-
mission might spell doom for all civilization.
This is why the UN has endured through the tumultuous
years 1945-1955. This is why it has survived the disillusion- sandwiches, thick slices of gar-
ments and disappointments of those who saw it at the start den ripe tomatoes amHhin slices
as some sort of magic preserver of the peace.
It is not a peace enforcement agency, and as now con-
stituted cannot be. For the UN has no enforcement army of
its own, and any of five great powers may veto punitive action
against itself or any lesser nation dependent upon it.
Realistically, we of the free nations do not count on the
UN to safeguard the peace. The NATO pact and all the related
defensive arrangements in the Middle and Far F,ast serve
that objective. . .
But we, like our adversaries in Moscow and Peiping, under-
stand that armies and alliances are not enough today, that
men yearning for peace demand that their hopes be given
brighter substance.
The united nations provides that substance.
A judge says that marriage is just a lottery. That may be
why so many people want another chance.
Policemen arrest an awful lot of people in autos who
don't know what they're driving at.
Discarded streetcars are used in some cities as homes. Mom
likely would rather hang on a strap than over thc sink.
The father of just one new baby passes out cigars and the
one who has quadruplets probably just passes out.
Down Memory Lane
June 26, 1935
rTHE annual style revue for Canadian county’s farm women
will be conducted Thursday, it was announced today by
Miss Harvey Thompson, county home demonstration agent.
Seven teams have made arrangements to take part in the
district Sandlot baseball tournament. H. G. Keller, secretary,
announced today.
El Reno policemen now are engaged in a campaign to
reduce the number of automobiles operated in the city with
improper lights, it was disclosed today.
of onions to put between the
slices of bread; ice cream and
two kinds of cake. If it can be
arranged I’ll have a boiler full
of corn on the cob and pitchers
of melted butter, and a howl of
mixed salt and pepper to put on
it. Then I’m going to eat as long
as it tastes good, not just until
I’m full or my appetite satisfied
and when this mission is accom-
plished I shall not earc what is
done with the remains, the din-
ner or mine. That’s what I call
a picnic.
man-
sion on the right, built directly tigbt and flcav« >ou bere
on the bluff overlooking the bay. wlth >our frlcnd 1 mentlon'
There were no lights and the front j
windows were boarded up with AS he spoke he lowered
to rot
thc
probably by picturesque pirate
Jean Lafitte, a contemporary of
Davy Crockett who helped to de-j
fend New Orleans against the!
British in 1814.
In fact, Disney researchers are
looking for evidence that Crockett
and Lafitte knew each other inas-
much as both fought for Gen.
Andrew Jackson. Hence Parker
stands a chance to continue as
Crockett in the Lafitte series.
Parker, who has a seven-year
contract with Disney, at present
is hotter on the Disney lot than
Mickey Mouse, Donald Duck and
Snow White combined.
wooden shutters the way many
winter residents leave their homes
during the summer and thc early
autumn hurricane season.
He laughed evilly as he saw her
looking around in an attempt to
orient herself, and said in his grat-
ing southern voice, “Take your-
self a good look, Ma’am. Then
start screaming your fool head off
if you’re a mind to. Won’t nobody
hear you. Won’t nobody ever come
down this here dead-end street.”
“Who are you” Lucy demanded
again. “What do you want with
me.
Look and Learn
1 How long did the cavalrymen
hold out against thc Indians in
Custer’s famous Last Stand?
2. Which U. S. state touches four
of the five Great Lakes?
3. In what opera by Mozart is
the story of Don Juan told?
4. How many reigning queens
have there been in England’s his-
tory?
5. What is the original meaning
of the word "magazine”?
ANSWERS
1. Attacked by a far superior
force, all the cavalrymen, includ-
ing their leader, were dead within
forty minutes.
2. Michigan.
3. “Don Giovanni.”
4. Elizabeth II is the sixth.
5. Storehouse.
June 26, 1945
QERGEANT and Mrs. Fred L. Schroeder. 638 South Milos.
will leave Wednesday for Anderson, Tex., where they will
visit the former’s parenis, Mr. and Mrs. W. A Schroeder, and
then will go to Port Arthur, Tex. to visit his brother, Herbert
Schroeder
Mrs. Catharine Lemon and daughter, Jo Ann, of 300 South
Choctaw, returned Monday from a month’s visit with friends
and relatives in Los Angeles, Calif.
William L. Fogg, El Reno attorney now serving in the
U. S. navy as a lieutenant, has recently been awarded a cita-
tion for excellent service, his parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. L.
Fogg, 611 South Hoff, were notified today. The citation, pre
sented aboard the ship to which he is attached in the Pacific,
was for services as boat wave commander and assistant con-
trol officer during the assault and capture of Iwo Jima.
Miss Elizabeth Guthrie, Chicago, 111., and Mrs A. O. Rine-
hart of Tunica, Miss., left today for Tunica after visiting in
the home of Mrs. Norma Turpin, 707 South Reno. Miss Guth
rie. a former resident of El Reno, now is employed by a model
ing agency in Chicago.
“Nothing particular with you,
Ma’am. 1 thought back yonder at
thc morgue maybe you'd recognize
me. but if you do or don't it don’t
make no never mind to me now.
All I want is that money from
your smart redheaded boss. The
money Jack Bristow gave to you or
him tonight. That's all I want,
Ma’am. And 1 sure intend to get
it one way or another.”
“We haven't got it,” she pro-
tested weakly. “Jack didn’t have
any money. Or, at least wc didn't
see it.”
* * *
HE shrugged and caught her
upper arm to lead her away from
the car toward thc empty and
deserted house. “Maybe Mister
Shaync lied to you. I dunno.
Maybe you lied to him. It don’t
matter much. He's sort of sweet
on you, huh?”
“No, he isn’t,” she said defiant-
ly. ‘ Don't think you can put pres-
sure on Mike Shaync through me.
You can't.”
"Maybe not. It sure can’t hurt
to try.” He was half-dragging,
half supporting her around the
beam so it shone on a female
figure bundled up with ropes on
the ground near the wall. Her
mouth was plastered tightly shut
with surgeon's tape, and her face
was white and haggard and des-
perate in the flashlight’s gleam,
but Lucy Hamilton had no diffi-
culty at all in recognizing Arlene
Bristow.
He swung the light away from
Arlene's face with an evil chuckle
and told Lucy, “She's been here
keeping right quiet and good since
before dark, and hasn’t died for
lack of air yet. Howsomever, with
two of you down here brathing up
the oxygen and with that door at
the top of the stairs shut tight and
locked, I don’t for sure know how
long you’ll last.
“Just think about how it is when
you start writing your boss that
note. Think how long it’ll take you
and your friend to die from lack
of water or starvation locked up
down here if Mister Mike Shayne
is crazy enough to try and set an-
other trap for me. Tell him just
how things are with you if he
doesn't cough up that 70 grand he
got from Jack Bristow.”
“But l tell you he didn't get
it,” said Lucy desperately.
“No matter about that now. I
don’t care if he did or not. I got
you right here where I want you,
and you're going to rot here unless
he pays up.”
* (To Be Continued)
University Plans
New Science Class
NEW! SENSATIONAL!
STEEL SUBWAY SAFETY SHELTER
APPROVED BY CIVIL DEFENSE
The SUBWAY was designed for protection, family protec-
tion against disaster, tornadoes and bombs. It protects you
against the major results of a nuclear explosion, heat, blast,
radiation and fall out.
NO DOWN PAYMENT
36 MONTHS TO PAY
OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY
604 THOMPSON DRIVE
ROCHESTER. N. Y„ June 25—(IPi
—An unsual course, dealing with
the effects that important scienti-
fic advances have had on national
affairs and international relations,
will be introduced next fall in the
University of Rochester’s college
of arts and sciences.
The course for upperclassmen is
entitled "Science in National and
International Affairs.” Class dis-
cussions will revolve around the
scientific activities of the U. S.
government and their relation to
thc national economy and the na-
tional defense.
The semester course, given two
hours a week, also will dwell on
the scientific activities of the Uni- ’
ted Nations and its specialized I
agencies and their relation to this
country's foreign policy.
D. A. V. CHAPTER 4, EL HERO
WHITE ELEPHANT SALE
ON THE COURTHOUSE LAWN
Friday Evening, July 1st, 7 p. m.
COME IN AND
TRY IT! the
Gene Dozier Insurance
Auto-Home-Buslness-Farm-Llfe
I Save Up Phone II
ItO 40% 1W East Woodson 4
Farmers Insurance Group
GRASSHOPPER SPRAYING
We have the airplanes and the chemicals available
for spraying grasshoppers
Kill Them BEFORE, Not After, They
Damage Your Fields!
Discounts for spraying 500 acres or more
L. D. Todd Calumet “Y” Farm Store
Phone 2328 J-l
NEW R0VAL
PORTABLE
!WITH SENSATIONAL CiE^i
SPEED SELECTOR I,
Hand Tools, Garden Tools, Oil, Groceries, Cakes,
Pictures, Frying Chickens and Many Other Articles.
AUCTIONEERS WILL BE
C. L. EVERETT, El Rene DALE WALKER. Mountain View
FISHING EQUIPMENT
Will be Given Away During This Sale
INCLUDING HANDSOME
FIBERGLAS CARRYING CASE
You May Also Choose From
Smith-Corona, Underwood
and Remington Models |
HENRY BEHNE
JEWELER
WE CAN HANDLE WHEAT
WITH UP TO 23% MOISTURE
FOR STORAGE OR SALE
IF CONDITIONS ARE SUCH THAT YOU CANT
CUT DRY WHEAT, THEN WE ARE EQUIPPED
WITH A GRAIN DRYER TO HELP YOU
SAVE THIS CROP!
WE ARE ALSO BUYING WET BARLEY!
We Have Operated This Dryer For
Three Days and Find That We Can
Reduce the Discount Rate
FARMER’S
GRAIN COMPANY
El Reno, Okia. Phone 2515
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Dyer, Ray J. The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 64, No. 101, Ed. 1 Sunday, June 26, 1955, newspaper, June 26, 1955; El Reno, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc920569/m1/4/: accessed April 23, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.