The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 53, No. 2, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 2, 1944 Page: 4 of 8
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Four
The El Reno Daily Tribune
A Blur Ribbon Newspaper Serving a Blur Ribbon Community
Issued daily except Saturday from 207 South Rock Island avenue,
and entered as second-class mail matter under the act of March 3. 1879.
RAY J. DYER
Editor and Publisher
BUDGE IIARLE
News Editor
DEAN WARD
Advertising Manager
The ASSOCIATED PRESS is exclusively entitled to ttie use of
Inside
The Axis
Presenting Parts Assembled
by the Imelxii Service
Division of llir tillin' of
War Inloi inalion
FI Reno (Okla.) Daily Tribune
In Unily There Is Slrenglh
k
Thursday, March 2, 1944
W(Tm THE N AliO M
IM PERIL
;evecVbodv/
must BE.
UMITED/
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Pu^aUoT^TtVTn;;r^spaVhM credited to it or not credited by WASHINGTON
1,14 All puWiwttoni'of s^Oai despatches \iereln also are reserved.
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SOUTHERN NEWSPAPER
PUBLISHERS ASS'N.
daily subscription RATES
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including Sales Tax
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Mar 2 -'Spe-
Early In 1043. at about
the time the Germans suffered I
their disastrous- defeat nt Stal-1
ingrtid. it became fashionable for I
Nazi party fuehrers in the occu- i
pied countries to announce that!
,Mn ' tin’s* were leaving theli party Jobr
BV MAIL IN CANADIAN AND | tempol-iIUj
ADJOINING COUNTIE | lighting on ie e:i r rn In ml
----Looi Now lhe MiolUU* Natl lender.. I
\A
i/\v
CoMGK&v’
/
Plow
Points
Dy Tom M. Marks
County Agent At Large
2-iSpceiali
March is a big planting month
for victory gardeners in all sections
CJTILJ
Baptist Services
Are Continuing
Special nightly services at the
First Baptist church arc continuing
with Increasing congregations and
! interest, n'.cordlng to Rev. .! W.
| Hodges, pastor.
Rev. Guy Bellamy, superinten-
dent of city missions in Oklahoma
City, spoke Wednesday night on
The Power of the Word.” To-
1UI VILIUI y Ml an 0WV1VIW
of the state, point out horticultur- nl*ht W® message wUl be on “Tlie
tsts at Oklahoma A. and M college. | Piovlder.cc of God. Tills mes-
Late February plantings will have sa8,‘ aPP'ies especially to God's
been made in southeastern coun- I Llesslng on womanhood, and is ln-
ties but as a general thing the first
Z
__________>5 00
Thursday, March 2. U'W
IIWK THOUGHT
the world
BECAUSE THEY
THEY COULD WIN
they all failed
FOE: From heaven
MANY AMBITIOUS MEN
BV MIGHT AND BY ' l .WING.
IGNORED AN INVISIBLE
fought Ibr stars, fro... their courses H.ey fought against • ■ ■
Judges 5:20._____
Prelude lo ‘Revolt’
took the dramatic impact of Senator Barkley’s speech
ax bill veto to make most of us realize* how w
an arc the l*nd„lum of conKreMiondaeat^nt h» trav -
on "the tax bill veto to make most of us
a tstslsiJL.
irpr^idcaef !«*-
seem to be on tlieir way buck.
Tlie German DNB asen y dij
closed recently that Ciptnin Leon i
DeGrelic, licad of the Belgian j
•'Rexist" |>arly. had bobbed up in j
Berlin to lirip tlie Germans ex- I
plain that they had not suffered j
another major disaster in tlie,
“Clierkassy pocket ” I : t week lhe ,
German-eoiii rolled Pans radio re- |
ported that Lieutenant Jacques |
Doriot. Iiea.l of the pru-N.izi
"French Popular Party," wa. due
back in Paris There w,us on word
of Major Fritz Clau en, head of
the Dullish Nazis At last report j
Clausen, a doctor, was working
in an SS (elite guard) hospital
in Germany.
:$i**1
■
A
^ But,uc
..11 his record of undeviating su|>port _ - .
•.live urogram, and be practically assured of another
term The country was in a mess and the voters wtTe pt i -
l'ectly willing to let the president get them out of it, with-
much worry over the
I hree-way
until
especially
independence has in-
put too much worry ovu. u.c constitutional
division of authority.
There was no significant defection in congress
ihc -court packing” bill of 1957. That flurry of opposition
subsided but novel quite to the former level of acquie-
scent support. Voters began sending an increasingly sub-
stantial minority of Republicans to congress,
to the house. And congressional
creased as the war progresses, even though the necesMtn •
of war foster an authoritarian, ^centralized government.
THU recent causes that contributed to the climax of Feb.
" 2:} are numerous, varied ami generally familiar. And
the path to that climax has been marked by numerous
mistakes on both sides. A good example is the Smith-Con-
uallv anti-strike act. which congress angrily passed -over
the president’s veto. As a law, it is a patchwork of compro-
mise which has fulfilled its promise ol almost complete in-
effectuality. But the administration had handled the coal
-trike and other war-industry work stoppages in such a
dilatory, confused and (some congressman insisted) vote-
conscious manner, that the legislators were ready to pass
almost any bill, in as speedy and unequivocal a manner
u# possible.
# ♦ #
S
garden planting spasm will occur ill ]
early March. In this group of early
vegetables arc such crops as po-
tatoes, peas, lettuce, spinach, radish-
es, onion sets and cabbage plaats.
Around the middle of March it
will be time to plant such crops as
carrots, beets, mustard, onion plants
and Swiss chard Then, of course,
there Is that all important job
of getting tomato seed started early
in March if the job was not done
In February. For folks who are
planning to glow sweet potatoes tlie
bedding job must be done around
the middle of March. All in all it
is easy to see that Marcli is a very
busy month for Oklahoma victory
gardeners.
* * *
TX) avoid running out of that pre-
1 cious commodity “time.1
iWi I il -II i i < ........ 1 !
Handels-oth Sjoefarfetidniiig. |
a pro-allied publication, declared
recently that Germany still lias a
probable total annual supply of
15,500,000 tons of natural and .syn-
thetic oil and that the oil ques-
tion at present was "no unsolvablc
problem" for tlie Nazis.
'Despite air raids on certain Qer-
inan oil Industries us well us on
Ploe.sti." the paper said, "the Qcr- |
man army at present probably'
still has at Its disposal an annual I
/
50?
Behind lhe Scenes
In Washington
4.000 00(1
L'VEN if you don't approve the cohgreaaional ‘‘revolt,’
be dismissed by calling the congress a bunch
I
it
can't be dismissed by calling the congress a uuiicn of
willful reactionaries. There may be such men and women
on Capitol Hill. But just as long as congressmen enjoy
their jobs and their salaries, they are going to listen to
their constituents, and try to please them as fully as their
consciences are prejudices will allow. They are not as fort-
unate, perhaps, as the members of government agencies
who can formulate and administer policies and still keep
out of the voters’ reach. They have to reflect the will of
the people, or the people are going to hire a new lx>y.
It can lx* tragic, of course, if this ‘‘revolt’ is the begin-
„,ng. rather than the end. of a quarrel- We CU only hope Hy
that the president will recognize congress as an intelligent ^ ^ up mn N(/j Fmich
and equal partner in government, rather than a necessary R|1(| ,,.llM)(cul, ln antlcl_
evil, and that congress will recognize that all ol the pit?si-1ptttion *>r the -ilUcd invasion Ju<ph
dent's moves are not neeessarily suspect. We can only' Duruand, vicliy "Heinrich Himm-
hope that ImiIIi putkl will quickly agree on a program ofjici <> reported
cocqxTation, not obstruction.
production of at least
tons of natural oil, plus 5.500.0001
tons of synthetic oil arid 6,000,000 ,
tons o( Rumanian oil."
* • *
FTAHtl Nazi-controlled Parts radio
* disclosed recently that the Ger-
mun navy liad opened a recruit-
ing office at Caen, where French-
man “with good records” were
railed upon to volunteer for en-
rolment in "special detachments
with the consent of the French
(Vichy > government.”
The broadcast said volunteers
between 17 and 45 would be ac-
ceptable and promised Frenchmen
the "same treatment and advant-
ages as Oermap recruits."
a a a
11!HEN tire Germans took over
full control In occupied Al-
bania afier Uie Italian surrender
last September, they announced
the establishment of an "indepen-
dent Albanian government"—under
German supervision
Now, however, the Nazis seem to
have dropped even the pretense of
'independence." In referring lo
Uie puppet Albanian government
recently, tlie German Transocran
agency called it "the Albanian
government- commission "
BY PETER I.USON
NEA Stall Cor respondent
rpilK pasting which a U. S. Navy task force administered the Japs
* on Truk offers lhe best example you could ask for lo show
naval ladies have expanded since the start of WoHd War I. *
•l’.uk i. 3500 miles from Pearl Harbor, principal base for U^b. fleet
operations in the Pacific, and under the old con
i opts of logistics, it wasn’t considered safe for a
fleet to operate in combat that far away from
h°Today, however, 3500-mile radius operations for
naval task forces may be considered just a begin-
ning for long-range naval warfare, and even a
5000-mile radius tor future naval operations is no.
beyond the realm of possibility.
Rocking-chair admirals and amateur strategist-
have frequently stated as gospel the maxim that
maximum distance at which a fleet could fight was
2500 miles from its base. Sound naval tacticians
have never considered themselves bound by this
2500-mile range limitation, insisting that it has been a misconception
,,nd too tight a radius of operation.
I'XPANSION of task force and naval combat range of operation
\'A\: *1In .o a number Of factor* Of primary importance is
nil
range of some ships by as much
Hollywood
Film Shop
Hy Knicst Foster
United Press Correspondent
I TOLLYWOOD. Mar. 2 —:U.R>—
Edson
tended to bring both comfort and
assurance to women whose bur- )
dens seem heavy to bear. Rev.
Hodges says.
Saturday night Rev. Bellamy will I
deliver a message for men and |
women in tlie armed forces and
for all who have loved ones in
the service
An outstanding feature of tlie
si>ecial services, says Rev. Hodges,
is the junior choir which sings a
special number eacli evening. The
senior choir likewise presents spe-
cial numbers from time to time.
Rev. Bellamy is high ill his praise
of the congregational singing which
is led by the pastor.
More than 60 young persons
were present Wednesday night for
group meetings for 30 minutes be-
fore the preaching srvlcc.
The services, which begin at
7:30 p. m.. are open to the public. 1
Public Records
to Hu
tu k force
the ^i'crl'VedEfficiency of ship^lpropulsion which has increased the
llmge of sSie ships bv as much as 1000 miles, it has given the
it s Now a (lc.*cided edge over the Japs.
On top of ibis 1000-mile gain in radius, alrpower .
II i mue ol licet operation by os much as 500 miles. This hi,-s J0'
development ot the aircraft carrier as the central figure « »
Carriers, needing speed to give J^ir stubby-winged
i,| ,n. the extra lift which will get them into the air and back on
E on aratively short landing decks, have had to sacrifice arma-
ue the -Peed. But that has meant that the carrier* pr»-
teitiiig forces of cruisers and destroyers have had to be built to keep
mi with the range and speed of the carrier.
While submarines cannot keep up wilh these speedy movements.
Jhcy have range ilmt permits them to
* ---------- **•“ ,l(iu LUOPli *«»w-
laying at i>ca
operate out of Pearl Harbor
ltack on hipping lanes near the Jap coast, the full 3800 miles.
The average jfirl who leaves home is 15, according
to statistics. The average girl who says home is about NH.
Failure of the Germans to pi
25 miles below Rome is blann
made by Field Marshal Keselring.
head.
»i the allies into the sea
on numerous mistakes
He didn’t use his hcach-
Down Memory Lane
Mar. 2, 1984
\V. Arthur Uiggert was elected chairman of the Boy
Scout committee of the El Reno American Legion |M»st No.
84 during a meeting of the group yesterday in the Legion
hull. | • *n % III All Ml
Tom Shacklett, chief of Mice, was feeling a bit stiff
and sore today. He assisted in moving the household goods
to their new home on South Williams avenue yesterday.
Tom admits he is not accustomed to that ty|x* of exercise.
Junior police officers who will serve during the re-
mainder of the 1958-84 school term were commissioned
during the u sendily of he El Reno junior highschoo!
student body yesterday. Officers installed included Clarence
Essex, captair Earl Yost and Bill Kelly, lieutenants; Jack
Hodgkinson Jack McKinster, Stuart MacSwain, A. B. John-
son. William Haun. Stanley Trotter and G. W. Warlick. j
mi camiHiUtiui to eliminate Dc-
GhiiIIIsI elements in tlie Vicliy youth
movement, (lie Chuntipi's ,le In
Ieilliex.se, ami stlengthen tils arm- i
ed militia
With the "restenaUon" some weeks !
aim of General Paul de ia Porte du j
’I'ltril as commissioner ol the Chun-
tiers de la Jeunos.se, (lie Vichy mili-
tia's Journal. Combats, sounded the
rail for a new and eonccrted pro-
urum of "ixilitiral ediieallon" for
French youth Al about tlie same
lime a reliable private report from
overseas disclosed that the class of
11144. which presently Is being draft-
ed for service in tlie Chan tiers de la
Jcuncs.se, was to be trained along
IradKional Nazi "Hitler Youth" lines
lor service in Darnand's militia
The Htockhnlm Aflonbladet also
reported recently that militia lead-
er training camps were functioning
In Vlchv, Lyons. Marseilles. Tou-
louse, Clermont-Ferrand, and Un-
rlagc. near Orenoble.
Darnand. who holds lhe title of
secretary general for the main-
tenance of order in the Vichy re-
gime, also declared recently that
he wanted more aggressive action
from his |x»lico chiefs.
"All those who have distinguish-
ed themselves,” he told Ills police
chiefs, "will be rewarded, and those
[who will loilcw the 'wait and sec
policy will be turned down."
covering perhaps 10,000 mile:, on one lour of duty,
for weeks.
m New Caledonia, Brisbane, Sydney and Port parwivi ’’J A“fl‘
_ II from 3000 to 3000 miles from Tokyo, but only1”00,
,ml, from newer auxiliary ba-os In the Solomons and the Oitbwl*.
Th, „f Vice Admiral William L. Calhoun, commander of the
Pa die Fleet S^rvic. Force, Is now one ot keeping ample supplies
aT lhe-c limit advanced poaiUon-. well over 2500 miles wet of Pearl
Harbor, over 5000 miles west of San Francisco. „
As the war moves Into ikese extreme iangc operations, al P«' ’ "1|
Inward the .lap ba,c at Truk, the Pacific campaign unteis on
new and highly important trluiiflc of Truk-T«*yo-Mamla
Oscar last year as "Mas Miniver,'
lias been chosen by the Academy of
Motion Picture Arts and Sciences
to present the top award to this
year's winning actress, at the aca-
demy’s 16th annual awards presen-
tation.
The red-haired M-O-M star will |
join George Murphy, vice president
of the Screen Actors guild, ln pre-
senting the academy's highest act-
ing awards tonight at Oraunian s
Chinese theatre.
Long speeches have joined the an-
nual banquets on the wartime cas-
ualty list. Nominees for awards
wUl hold their acceptance speeches
to a half minute to keep the stream-
lined program on schedule.
The last half hour of the program,
featuring the presentation of the
highest awards, will be short-waved
to soldiers, -allors. and marines on
every fighting front.
• • •
p ANDGLPH SCOTT and Joe De-
A rlta. with souvenirs, trinkets,
and a trunkful of pictures, are back
in Hollywood after covering 18.000
miles entertaining troops in the
south Pacific for 62 days
Wherever the entertainers went
; —New Caledonia, Guadalcanal, the
Fljls, Munda. New Georgia—they
were Impressed "by the tremendous
Job that has been done out there.'
A soldier once approached Scott
saying he had a very important,
personal question. "When I walk-
ed aside with him." Scott said, he
asked. 'Tell me, Mr 8cott, did
j John Wayne really hit you that hard
I in the picture. Pittsburgh'?"
care-
ful planning is important. Plan-
ning is the only way you can make
your time go farther ln doing what
is necessary to be done. It Is also
Important that we gardeners real- Marriage License
ize that wc should not try to plan J(m M,Brlde> 21, 0, KunIoi1,
all the vegetables oi) the list but aQd ^ EUU>1. of okla_ |
select carefully those we want to ] homa Clty
plant and then get those planted at | Annulment Suit
the time they should be piantad foi |ik „ wultam8> , ity\
best results. That is the reason a h(s moUler Allct, willlain.:. v
plantir.: calendar is so Important Connlc william,. minor P' i:-|
The calendar gets its first teal woik tlon (0I annulment of marriage
out in March, too. because there Is (ivi| S|ljt
a lot of planting to be done. Frank J. Hazel and Ethel Hazel
Do not fill up the garden with I vs. heirs of J. H. Fore and others,
early vegetables, either, because j Suit to quiet title of real estate
you will need plenty of space for |
those crops that are to be planted
later on. Plan and plant wisely
and timely. Such a program is the
key to a production garden.
Look and Learn
Warranty Deeds
Maud and A G Carlile to Belli |
Carlile. One-half NW 21-12-10.
Lizzie Bomhoff et al to Henryl
G Buinhoff Part of lot 13. block|
149. El Reno
Charles F McDonald to Orucel
B McDonald. Part of lots 11. 12J
13. 14 and 15. block 107. El Reno.)
Assignments of Oil and Gas Leases
W O. Mouser to Mugnolia Pe-
a keen j troleum company. Part of SW 21-1
see only j2.5
J C Ross to Leonard A ChudJ
acoff SE NE 2-13-5.
George L. McTeagle to Sun Oil
company. NW 4-14-9
J L. Shaw to Sinclair Prairiti
Oil company. NW SW 13-14-8; SE|
NE. SW. lots 3 and 4. S NW
4-11-8; E. NE. SW. NW 8-14-8j
NE. NW 16-14-8; NW. NE, N S\
15-14-8; lots 3and 4 S NW 8W|
SF. 2-14-8; SE. NE W tl-i4-8{
NW SW. lots 1 and 2. S NE|
SE 3-14-8; NW. SW. SE. NE lo{
14-8. SE. SW. NW 9-14-8. SW|
i »I—- is
j SE 14-14-8. NW 12-14-8; NE. Nw[
1-14-9. ..
with- Release «f till and Gas l^asesl
Magnolia Petroleum company id
* Vileltc A M Loosen ct al. Nvj
_ j32-14-9
Anderson Prichard Oil corpora
: tlon to F J and Julia Kupka
S SW 1-10-5.
Oil and Gas Leases
Viola Wells et al to W O Mou
I net. Part of SW 21-12-5.
i William W and Harriet M
Slroud to Oeorge L. McTeaglt
; NW 4-14-9
1. What animal has
sense of hearing but can
distance of a few yards?
2. Which are the most valuable,
diamonds or rubies?
3. What is meant by the med-
ical term sinapism?
4 Where is Death valley?
5. What Is the meaning of
"bonaflde?”
ANSWERS
The rhinoceros.
Rubies
A plast
ing mustard.
4. In California
5. In or with good faith;
out fraud or deceit.
1’iihlii- Notices
* * *
a t
Truk is
•on mile from Pearl Harbor/but from Truk to Tokyo or from D Wednesday she has been walk-
•i , nl t„ Manila is only a little over 2000 miles, and that’s getting the ihp ground for a month wlUr three
\ buck under the old 2300-niile ladius of operation, even ‘bough rib,s Tlie Paramount Jlt-
Manib. to 731HI miles from San Trammo. 5000 mile# beyond leail (lc.r|„m was not aware of her in-
H,rbor. {jury until X-rays for a pain ln
____ ,1110 side showed the damage.
--- Doctors believe the actress suffer-
1.000,900 RIVETS A DAY SCHOOLS SHOW DROP ,.d th(, p,jury R month ago when
CLEVELAND—(U.R>—The men la’* j BERKELEY. Calif.-:U.R)-Super-1 alie took a hard spill during an
hind the men behind the guns arc tatendent of schools Virgil Dickson J acrobatic dance routine
pouring it out on t lie home front.
for "In-
An estimated 700 rivet makers in
Cleveland alone are making more
than a million rivets dally for rail-
roads. ships, aircraft and tanks.
reports Berkeley schools have
total enrolment of 11,862 for the
spring term. He said the total en-
rolment was one-fourth less Ilian
that for the fall term.
a • cendtary Blonde."
■t
i Published in Tlie El Reno Daily
Tribune El Reno. Oklahoma. Feb.
17. 24. Mar 2.)
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
No 2678
STATE OF OKLAHOMA.
CANADIAN COUNTY, ss
In the County Court of
8«id County and State:
To tlie Creditors of
Alvina A Maiine. Deceased:
All persons having claims against
Alvina A Maunc, deceased, are re-
quired to present the same with the
necessary vouchers to the under- !
signed administrator at 520 Liberty ,
Bank Building. Oklahoma City, Ok- I ln
lalKHim. tn Oklahoma County . Ok- | flf
lalioma. within four months of the
date hereof or same will lie forever i
barred. „ _ .
Dated this 17th day of February.
1944
It WILLIAM MAUNF,.
Administrator. ,
Everest. McKenzie & Glbbens.
520 Liberty Bank Building, I
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
Problem a Day
What number must be added t
each of the numbers 2. 47. and 1
ord> M pi MhM' "i 'I'
first two sums shall be equal
the square of the last sum?
ANSWER
2. Explanation— Multiply 47 an
2; subtract from the square of 1!
add 47 and 2. and from tilts sub
tract tlie sum of 12 and 12; dlvkJ
Into 50.
J'
Private Broker Abroad Ky u. d.** R^er
Organization of the Canadian county medical auxil-
iary with Mrs. Malcom E. Phelps as president was an-
nounced today. Other officers include Mrs. Thomas Atler-
lmld, vice president; Mrs. Hadley C. Brown, recon
secretary; Mrs. William B. Catto, corres|>ondiiiK secretary;
and Mrs. Erwin Wulter Blatter, press reporter.
#
Lesson in
Englls
h
A 7 o'clock dinner was given lust ni|(ht by Mrs. Haydn
J. Davis, 512 South Rock IhIhihI avenue, in celebration
of the birthday annivery of her son, Haydn, jr.
Mrs. L. Lee Watkins of Cameron, N. M., is visiting
sister, Mrs. (3. E. Kester, 614 South Macomb Hveiiue.
Mrs. M.
today from a
C. Kemi, 614 North Evans avenue, returned
brief visit with relatives in Chickasha.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl P. Botts, 1106 Sunset drive, enter-
tained today with a dinner at which their guests were Mr.
and Mrs. L. S. Bonesteel and sou, Peter, of Kansas City,
Mo., Mr. and Mrs. Robert Grose and daughter, Jean, of
Oklahoma City.
WORDS OFTEN MISUSED Do
not say. "I was kind of surprised
to hear about It." Say. "I was
Nomrwhut surprised "
OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED
Sure. Pronounce xhoor, as in
poor, not shore
OFTEN MISSPELLED Cellar ia
room below the ground), Seller
(one who sells).
SYNONYMS: Create, originate,
Invent, improvise, devise
WORD STUDY: "Use a word
three times and It I* yours." Let
us increase our vocabulary by
mastering one word each day. To-
day's word; OBLITERATE; to re-
1 move or destroy utterly by any
1 means "Tlie harsh and bitter icoi-
I ingii of this or that experience ere
' slowly obliterated."-W Black
r
' ft i
w:
i
I J
H Kmjt r- eluffi Syndmtr, |i»
>.j r
31)
I
\
‘‘1 want you to notify Colonel Cole to atop hu attack
until we get more map pins!’’..
AMES CAONEY. president of the
Screen Actors guild, reported
i today that fighting men overseas
| no longer are seeing old movies.
| but new films, arriving "fast and
I often."
In a report to the guild. Cagney
I declared that films donated by the
I movie Industry now have their
| world premieres overseas. Many of
I them are shown in combat zones
I before they open on Hollywood/ and
j Broadway.
Armed forces took 10 movies to
1 the Gilbert islands and looked at
I them as soon as they had destroy-
l cd the Japs, Cagney said
| Tlie ftery-haired actor now Ss ln
Europe on a Hollywood Victory
eoinnilttee-USO camp show tour.
• * *
! GINGER PINKY TOMLIN has
! (J run Into nothing but trouble
i the past few weeks,
i After two years of army camp
: shows. Tomlin figured he'd pick up
some money doing three weeks of
! personal appearances in the south.
His plans were changed by a
! succession of hard breaks First
mine news that both his children
| were down with the ehlckenpox
j Then the singer received his t-A
draft classification.
He arrived In Hollywood Just In
time to rush his wife to the hos-
pital with pneumonia, and his
mother-in-law to another hospital
with an ear Infection
Sally’s Sallies
By Scot!
/
B
//
\
3-2'
Vk m |J jujih j
'My friend started showing me how he won the diving contest
and ! haven’t seen him since.”
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Dyer, Ray J. The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 53, No. 2, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 2, 1944, newspaper, March 2, 1944; El Reno, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc921038/m1/4/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.