The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 54, No. 101, Ed. 1 Tuesday, June 26, 1945 Page: 1 of 6
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ingle Copy, Five Cents
The El Reno Daily Tribiine
<UJ9 MEANS UNITED PREB8
Delegates Are
Signing Pact
At Conference
Final Version Of
Charter Approved At
Triumphant Meeting
SAN FRANCISCO. June 16 —</P)
L—With great issues of war and
j Peace hanging on their pen strokes,
it delegates of 50 countries went to a
, flag-draped conference auditorium
I today to sign the new united na-
tions charter and then hear Pres-
ident Truman make his first major
L address on American foreign pol-
I Icy.
A triumphant meeting or the uni-
| |ted nations conference — its last
working session — last night ap-
proved the final version of the
I 'charter. The signatures go on to-
I [day; next comes the slower process
I of ratification.
Rapping last night's session to its
(Close. Britain's tall delegation chief,
I the earl of Halifax, who presided,
(Solemnly told the conference:
“I think we all agree we have
I [taken part In a historic moment In
I [world history.''
Controversy Cleared
|i AU controversy had been cleared
laway days before this final se-
ction and the vote of approval was
la unlnanlmous standing vote.
I President Truman, who received
la thunderous welcome to the city.
I Is scheduled to make the closing
I address of the conference. H i s
4 speech, approximately 30 minutes
■long, will follow brief talks by dele-
ligation chiefs of the Big Five and
^representatives of five small na-
iltlons.
| Officials estimated the signing
‘' would require about eight hours. A
f last minute change in plans pushed
l Argentina out of alphabetical fust
place and put the conlerence spon-
I • soring powers and France at the
Price Paid for Stepping Stones to Japan
Efiii
El Reno, Oklahoma, Tuesday, June 26, 1945
(A MEANS ASSOCIATED PRESS
Volume 54, No. 101
I
OKINAWA, 35,116—8
■'t “i
I WO, 19,938—26 DAYS
,W «
> Y7'. .f» V
f.r; •
i
*
is. fflBM
(FORMOSA BOkl111 IS. \
President Given
Stirring Reception
At San Francisco
Mauldin, Out of Army,
Levels Charge at Patton
Cartoonist Says Commander Would Dictate
Thoughts and Emotions of Soldiers
PHILIPPINES
China
Sea/
GUAM*
VAR
CAROLIkE IS
PAI aij
TRUK PONAPC
MARSHALL IS.
«
NEW GUINEA
SOLOMON IS.
.. Jf88*'! of Amerlcan llves to *he campaigns on Tarawa, Saipan, fwo Jima and Okinawa, four of the
bloodiest battles U 8. forces have fought In the Pacffic. brought bases which are enabling American
fighting men to strike at the heart of Japan. The picture chart shows the U. S. killed and wounded in
™ y SP<>U! Japanese kuled on th« sam« fronLs were: Tarawa, 6.500; Saipan. 26,000. Iwo Jima.
23,000; Okinawa. 90.000.
Committee Told
GuardsPunished
Investigation Made
At Nebraska Base
WASHINGTON. June 36—<UJ>>-
A house military attains suo-coin-
mittee was Wormeu today that
guaids who Deal soldier pilsoners
at tile Fort Lincoln, Neo., air oase ■
last year had been pum.-ntU
Hepresentative Leon H. Oavm
'Republican. Pensyivanlai tola the
noa»e yesterday tnat an M l’ haa
clubbed a young cadet at the base
into unconsciousness some tune
last year.
“O WVAA BO UIDOV Wl MIC llllll'Sl
“nations will represent their pledge n. ; •/* ht
[to work together in peace to save |tomnilll,e w,l*cn inv«summed Hit
I future generations from the scourge 'ase' -sald 1 **' ' “del. who tiad beta
J of war and to try to raise the liv- j40U11011,1 Haled for a minor inirat-
■ lng standards of men everywhere. t,on °* lbe ru^*’Si bad been ordered
, J Twenty-six years ago next Thurs- 1 to br,aK roc*s w*th a short-
H day the treaty of Versailles was sign- l‘a,,tl,ra sledge at 120 strokes pei
' ed ending World War I. That treaty 1 mlnulc a,la ‘no M.P. did not m-
1 Incorporated Uie covenant of the
■ League of Nations—man's llrst but
1 futile attempt In this generation to
E create lnternatloi.al cooperation and
I prevent future wars.
Aware of Pitlalln
I The delegations which helped to
I produce the present document are
I aware of all the pitfalls ahead of
I them. Some of the delegates—the
■ venerable Field Marshal Jan C
Did You Hear
head of the order of signers. Thei
rone exception was that the United ]
(States, as host country and in or- '
I der to simplify witnessing of the I
M ceremony by President Truman, I
■ preferred to appear in 50th place.
| Procedure Indicated
Thus the order Is China, Rus-
sia, Britain, France, Argentina and
■so on in alphabetical arrangement
■ A published list of names lndl-
■ cated Dean Virginia Olldersleeve of
■ the U. S. group would be the last
■ person here to put her name on
■ the historic papers.
■ The signatures of the great pow-
Wers a.s well as those ol the tiniest
ana tno M.P. did not oe
lieve he was working last enough
Other Cases I neovered
Oavtn said "a number ol other
cases were uncovered" Involving
privates, non-commissioned ol-
licers and even a chaplain." He
called on the war department to
punish alt those Involved and to
Hnd out If similar incidents ot
ge.stapo-type training" had oc-
curred at other camps.
l»oy D. HAHN, stationed at
** Naples, Italy, with a ground
crew of the army air forces,
uas been promoted from cor-
poral to sergeant. He is the son
of Mr. and Mrs. Dan Hahn,
1202 West Watts street.
--o-
Sergeant Alfred E Garrett,
25, of Oeary. recently was
awarded the Bronze Star mpdal
for heroic achievement in action
on the fifth army front durlne
the Italian campaign Serving
with a tank battalion, he ma-
neuvered his tank over seeming-
ly Impassable terrain to knock
sut enemy machine gun nests
and German paratroopers which
had surrounded and threatened
to capture an infantry platoon.
He then took up a defensive
position and helped to repel six
;trong enemy counter-attacks.
Poles in Exile
Are Defiant
Declarations Given
Allied Governments
BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
SAN FRANCISCO, June 2b—(U.Pj
—i-rtsiaeut iruinan moved touay
into tne really top mgnt or the in-
ternational big tune where wars
are made ana the peace is Kept.
In his mast important venture
Into foreign ai'tarrs, the new presi-
dent goes betore diplomats oi tne
oO united nations rate this aftei-
noon to tell them that tneir re-
sponsibility during the peace will
be even greater than aunng the
war.
His speech will conclude the
united nations conference which
has worked here for nine weeks to
create machinery to prevent an-
other war.
Modesty Is Apparent
The president met international
diplomacy in lull blast yesterday.
When he arrived here by plane
from the Pacific northwest, where
he had been vacationing, he was
gieeted by the heads of all the
united nations. Then he rode
through a hail of conlettl and
ticker tape and past shouting sup-
porters to his Fairmont hotel head-
quarters.
Mr. Truman's reception impress-
ed him visibly, but he insisted with
modesty that It was not for him
personally but for the office he
represented.
"It was not for me,' he said "It
was for what we stand. It was for
the president of the United States.
[They were cheering the office, not
‘the man.’’
Dines with Dignitaries
In the late afternoon, the presi-
dent met the full conference dele-
gations at a reception at the Fair-
mont and later had dinner with
Secretary of State Edward R. Stet-
.tinlus, Jr., Governor Earl Wairen
I of California, Governor Mon Wall-
|gren of Washington. Mayor Roger
LONDON. June 26— <U P>—Dele-. Lapham of San Francisco and
gates of the. Big Four met today to me,nbers of the president's im-
. __ . , , 'mediate staff,
establish an International coprt Uj, Jramedlsite)y aIt„ he concludes
TARAWA, _
2,950—7 DAYS
DENVER, Colo., June 26—<U.R'—
Lieutenant General George S. Pat-
ton, commander of the third army,
today was the target of a charge
that he tried to "dictate" the
thoughts and emotions of his men.
The accusations came from Bill
Mauldin, Scrlpps-Howard cartoon-
ist considered a spokesman for the
American soldier. Mauldin was in
Denver yesterday enroute wtth his
wife to Los Angeles where he will
tell me what I should think and
what I should draw, what GIs
should think, what the American
people should think."
The young artist refuted a state-
ment attributed to the general sev-
eral weeks ago that he had seen
two of Mauldin's cartoons and
liked neither of them. When Gen-
eral Patton summoned him, Maul-
din said, his desk was coveted with
see his 22-months-old son for the ' examples of Mauldin-pictured rep-
first time.
Point-discharged from the army
two days ago, Mauldin, the creator
of the famous "Up Front with
Mauldin” and Its surcessor,
"Sweatin' It Out,’’ revealed some
details about an Interview he had
with General Patton last March in
Luxembourg.
Explaining that his recent dis-
charge had nothing to do with his
expression of opinion, Mauldin said
that General Patton called him
Into headquarters and "tried to
Windstorm Hits
Enid Sector
Extensive Damage
To Wheat Reported
Procedure For
Trials Talked
International Court
Is Plan Projected
An electrical and wind stoim
struck Emu at 3.at) a. in lousy.
Limos were turn irum trees, ham-
tall lotaieu 2.ni m.nes, uuouuig
all low streets, tne associaieu Hess brother, Dudley Dolen,
try major Nazi war criminals, pas
sibly beginning In August
Representatives of the United
States. Britain. Russia and France
hoped to reach agreement in lime to
present a complete plan to Presi-
dent Truman. Prime Minister
Churchill and Premier Stalin at
their conference in Berlin next
month.
A foreign office statement on to-
day's meeting said organization and
methods of procedure for the trials
were discussed and "agreement was
reached as to the urgency of com-
pleting the work as soon as pos-1
slble.”
Jackson Is Confident
Robert Jackson. U. 8. supreme
court Justice and chief American
prosecutor of war criminals, was
confident that the other nations
would adopt an American plan for
a military tribunal in toto.
Under the plan. Relchsmarshal
Hermann Goerlng, Former Oernian
the conference the president will
leave for an undisclosed destina-
tion between here and Kansas
City. Tomorrow the president will
arrive by plane at Kansas City
and proceed immediately to his
home town of Independence, Mo.,
for a homecoming celebration. On
Thursday he will be the guest of
Kansas City.
ft Smuts of South Africa, the tall, very-! Colonfl Hfrk*rt w Ande.son. R ~ 371- VdcnZV'd.cu* **"trop' Form'‘r Deport
■ correct ear. of Halifax of Britain.1 0,f‘"r 8t U"co‘“' « ‘ ca fed SL R“d?K . ,8nd ofh"
traced ~ von R,b-
handed aU .Uled «ore=nts «- *ntrop. Former Deputv Fuehrer
top wari
Fogg Is Given
Navy Citation
Presentation Made By
Commanding Officer
William L. Fogg. El Reno at-
torney now serving In*the U. 8
navy as a lieutenant, has recently
been awarded a citation for ex-
cellent service, his parents, Mr
and Mrs. H. L. Fogg. 611 8outh
Hoff avenue, were notified today.
The citation, which was pre
reported. ;Uon alleging conjoint robbery, was
btillwater had the same type of : ordered held for trial In district
stoim but omy i.Bo incites ui rant court after a preliminary hearing
lell. lnere was nign winu anu
hall but apparently tittle uamage
to crops. Electrical service was uis- aublon In Canadian county
rupteu temporal uy Ui me suuin- :court OwRy-
west part ol the btillwater ana [ The woman and the two Oklaho-
on a lew lines going out of me ;ma City brothers were identified by
city. victims as the persons who hl-
Graln men at Laid estimated Jacke(* three soldiers who were rob-
the wind and rain uamagcu an ,lle nlBht of June 9 after the
standing wheat. T he rain will halt j a0‘^iel s were offered rides while
the harvest mere lor at least three .hitch-hiking In El Reno,
days. Wheat Is about hall cut In ! The soldiers all were picked up
the area affected. »t different times In the 300 block
A hall-Inch ot lain fell at Ponca of North Choctaw avenue Each
City, accompanied by a strong was taken to a point north of El
wma. Ciops were Uamagea unu tne ! He no where each was threatened
wlieat harvest was stopped. wilh a knife, robbed of all cash and
Superforts Make
New Assault On
Main Jap Island
Enemy Broadcasts
Hint at Invasion
Nearer Homeland
BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
A medium force of American
Superfortresses launched a new at-
tack on Industrial targets on the
main Japanese Island of Honshu to-
day.
A 20th air force announcement In
Washington said the attack waa
made by B-29s of the 21st bomber
command shortly after midnight.
'June 27, Japanese time.)
The target was Yokkaichai, near
Nagoya.
The raid followed by only 14
hours a smashing attack by 450 to
*00 Superlortresses on 10 aircraft,
gun and ammunition factories on
Honshu.
The announcement said further
details of the fresh raid would be
announced after the bombers re-
turned to their bases in the Ma-
nana Islands
Reports In Conflict
Contradictory Jap broadcasts to-
day hinted at new allied Invasions
uf Islands closer to the Japanese
Homeland but there was no allied
continuation and the Japanese per-
haps were only speculating on the
American move.
The all-India radio, heard In Lon-
don. reported picking up one Jap-
anese announcement that forces
were attempting a landing on an
island halfway between conquered
Okinawa and the Japanese m»in
islands.
Such a broadcast was not heard
elsewhere, and the British radio as
recorded by CBS In New York, re-
wa* conducted before Judge Roy ^ ™i°vUfTokyo broadcast ma
saying only that an allied Invasion
fleet 0f 200 ships "Is expected to
attempt landings on two Islands be-
tween Okinawa and Japan.
resentations of soldier life In
Europe.
"He said my cartoons were un-
dermining the morale of the army,
were destroying confidence In the
command, were making soldiers un-
soldierly," Mauldin said.
"He said that I was blowing
off steam for the soldiers, that I
was giving them an outlet for their
emotions. He said he did not be-
lieve that soldiers should have any
steam let off for them or have
any outlet for their emotions.”
Woman Held On
Robbery Charge
Preliminary Hearing
Is Conducted Today
Willie Elizabeth Dolen, 26 of Ok-
lahoma City, charged Jointly with
her husband, Levi Dolen, and his
in an ac-
Ine heat wave was broken lem- brothers and the wife
poranly oy the ralniaii alter Htu- 7.. f)t?e uf thc ,nen were arrest*d b>'
erick, in the aoutnweatern section. P„k'aho"?a eotunt>’ a‘ Okla-
leporteu tue state's nign ol »» '7'14 „ y ^ne 10 ln connection
degrees yesterday Wltb ,allege<l h|J“rltln« st“8e«l ‘here,
_ . . ai>d later were connected with the
i' inperaiiuts ■ wrMm El Reno robberies
northwestern Oklahoma were In1
The island being invaded was
not Identified in the
heard in India
tne hign bracket yesterday witn
Both Dolen men were indicted
I' Paul-Boncour of France, and dlml- l„hat 8tal( ^us L. West. ^ 7“ n Wn slw lUegaJ
: nutlve Wellington Koo of China . Hermitage. Mo . had been court- J “ 7* M
'suffered through the leagues faU- last November on such , . ,'TSL^i! ' “ . *'°U
ures at Oenev. They have repeat- char*M and ^ntenced to two years lts authortt> onl^o a
If edly warned the world against ex
national eously on a single charge of con- which he Is attached In the Pa-
splracy | clfle, was for his services as boat
Britain already has Indicated her
[peeling a miracle this time and idl8char8e'
C ommandant Transferred
-I-*???—• *“ •TJTZ n, n;;". h7n"' ^
Anderson could not say whether tl0^
the soldier referred to but not
have urged that the charter and the
new organization be considered only
the beginning of a long-hard road
toward peace. j n*med by Oavtn was the one In-
The nine-weeks-old united na-!volved ln ,he West “«“•«*•
tlons conference Is expected to end ! Anderson also punitive ae-
on that note tonight. The keynote tlon had been instituted against
agg'-, ' several persons formerly ittached
to the guard after a recent ln- ’
The Polish provisional govern-
ment was formed In Moscow last
week. Including at least five Poles i
other than those ln the War saw-
regime.
The London poles termed the
been put forward either ln Mos-
cow or Paris.
Authority Given
Jackson has full authority from
President Truman to reach any
agreement he deems fit with the
other three powers. It was drubt
of their remarks—to be delivered In
eight languages—will be that the
It^nt * Pruonera- .t Urn InZ ST
vestigation of past irregularities new administration a "pseudo ful, though, that the Russian dele-
wave commander and assistant
control officer during the assault
and rapture of Iwo Jima.
The presentation to Lieutenant
Fogg, by the captain commanding
the ship, was made before the as-
sembled crew and officer personel.
The citation read:
"The commander, fifth fleet,
United States Pacific fleet, com-
mends Lieutenant William Lee
Fogg, United State* naval reserve,
for
Waynoka reporting 9U, Alva 89 anu ; J Oklahoma county grand Jury
El Reno 87 !June 15 on char&es of ripe «»nd
;robbery.
Boise City. In the western pan- ]__
handle, reported last night's low i A __
of 58 deg’ees and a trace ol rain I OI*H*r Is
Tne states pre.ipltation repoii, i, . . __
general in the western section, was IvGt 111*111 HR IlOmC
neaded by Enid's 2.70 inches. .
Rainfall Noted ® J"*”"* Rob*rt Port«
Outhrie, In the central section. J*“Id„n h. °Ve'' Nor'
recorded 102 Inches ol rainfall Z Z. ‘n Apr"
^l8,nm7rnlng °klahuma c“y had United States. He Ta',
Liberator waist gunner
he was al) right and would be 1 V- 8. Commander* Silent
mi
Chandler received
to the
a B-24
broadcast
Amami Gun to
Amami Oshima, Togara Ounto and
Vaku Shlma all are In the approxi-
mate location, however.
Amami Gunto Is about 300 miles
south of Kyushu, southernmost of
the main Japanese Islands yaku
Shlma Is less than 100 miles south
of Japan's shores while Amami
Shima and Togara Gunto are be-
tween Amami Gun ton and Yaku
Shlma.
"Grimly Determined"
Superforts made their mightiest
demolition raid today on Invasion-
conscious Japan which Premier
Kantaro Suzuki said was grimly
determined to repel American as-
saults whenever they come.
N e a rly 5 0 0 Superfortresses,
guarded by fighters from Iwo Jims,
rained 6,000,000 pounds of explo-
sives on 10 war plants in the
Nippon mainland
i Other American planes raided a
I Canton arsenal, Nanking oil fa-
I ellltles and a Formosa alcohol fac-
tory.
The U S. navy announced the
loss of the mine sweeper Salute ln
the Borneo area, where Tokyo said
a new allied Invasion Is ln the
making.
Nine men of the Salute crew
were klUed or missing. It was the
and Woodward 65.
Elk City had .20 and Oage 01 home on furlough as sqon as pos- Tokyo broadcasts reported an ln-
a shower, re- slble. i vsalon of Ternate Island south of
cording .10 Inches. Tulsi reported j B„rd when shot dQWn was h(d j the Philippines and to miles west
a race' den from the Germans bv antl-
The weatherman predicted cloudy Nazi Norwegians and, after sev-
to partly cloudy skies today through eral narrow escapes, succeeded in t1
Wednesday
I of Halmahera; again told of a pre-
| Invasion bombirdment of Ballk-
,papan on southeast Borneo: and
with
commanding
1944
Anderson, who followed Duncan
Marvin H. Koert
Hereon Furlough
Private Marvin H. Koert, pris-
oner of war from Nov 14, 1944 un- j
til his liberation last Apr. 5. Is
home for a 80-day furlough to visit
with his wife, 900 East Woodson
"reel, and hU parents, Mr. »nd|POV'‘rv of '•* v',"r
Mrs Herman Koert, 1301 Sunset
drive.
Arriving home this morning, well
•nd in good health, Private Koert
was serving with the 110th Infan-
try division of the third army st the
time of his capture
Oavin had told the house that jjj *rmy Mm<‘ "Wd^m
the only disciplinary action he ^ PoU<*. ; Joint conversations on the matter
knew of was the transfer of Brig- ^ form>1 statement issued Besides creating a trial court, the
ndler Oeneral Early E W Duncan, ,hrou*h th* P°H->h ministry of 'n- conference was expected to out-
offlcer until April ,orrnat*on, a bureau of the Lon- line the offenses over which it will
don regime, said "the so-called have Jurisdiction and establish the
Polish provisional government of '
national unity has been created
trial procedure.
showers and making his way to Sweden, a neu- t pred,cted other Ryukyu islands
thunderstorms ln the west and tral country, where he was in- ',ayln* between Okinawa and Japan
north portions today and most of terned until his return to the 1 would be invaded prior to an as-
the state tonight. Showers were United States Saturday sault on the homeland. Ail of this
forecart for eastern Oklahoma Full details of hts Internment [ Ic.Tcomm.U/re ^
service as set forth ln the,.. „ _J _____ _ ________
following citation: Wednesday. He promised little ,nd the pro:edure ,nvoived In re- ,
"For excellent service in the line Ichan«e tn temperature, however, turning him to American hands ~
of his profession as boat wave com- iPredlc>lng tod»y s high ranging were not available at this time TVlim'lll ErPntc
mander and assistant control of- *lorn to 90 degrees iniorm»ti«r w.. ki. Allalllall UI cClo
fleer from 19 February 1945 to 25 ' -
February 1945. during the assault
and capture of Iwo Jlmt. Demon-
strating courageous leadership un-
der enemy fire, he successfully led
his assault wave onto the beach
Information received by his wife,
the former Miss Leon Baker, stated
only that he would be home soon.
Now ln Camp Patrick Henry, Vs.,
Sergeant Beard, son of Mr. and
Mrs T N Beard. 812 South Miles
In command at the Lincoln air
the Pole* are deprived of the ele- L.T . “ ,na' Nafl arfh cr,ml*
mentary rights of man and cltl- a mln.mnm , ‘h"'
. . •• TBKe a minimum of one month be-
Wenther --------- c“u,e of th*UUral trmtok»dt °r
Swimming Pool Favored
By Adult Population
— . The aglult population of yi pPrr) avenue, Is holder of the elr medal
Once these basic problems have and 7*n.7nd'?d. valll*bl'‘ •«*»*- ; apparently U more wrtei minded w,th one 0,k >*•* cluster, swarded
tan.e ln the control of traffic, sal- than are their offspring, ,n March, and wears the ribbon
vage of landing craft, and evacus- a total of 846 persons bought ad- for th<“ European theater of opera-
t on of casualties His determine - missions to the El Reno municipal tlon*
tlon and outstanding devotion to 1 swimming pool Sunday and Mon-
ment from W.rs.w on tiT^ ^ 88 *»tad
tut Ion of the new government, a
SrS‘br.“oS:,‘l.“ ",y ""S Two-Slory Fall Causes
srirrM- jata&jrjrs *»* *** «• Head
Stale Foreeast — -® ---- ------------- ,
Cloudy to partly cloudy through st*p which la expected to bring i LawtOP To EnmuraffP
: Wednesday, with showers and thun- about withdrawal of American and] Small Industries
Two brothers also are in the ser- Oerstorms tonight In most of state 1,1:11 recognition of the London
vice, one ln the navy, the other a and In east Wednesday; little change Po"*b government.
"Commendation ribbon author-
ized"
The citation was signed by R A
Bpruance. admiral, U 8. navy.
marine corpsman.
Cook First Clans Calvin Koert, U.
S navy, la somewhere In the Paci-
fic. Private Alvin O. Koert. U. B.
marine corpe, completed a brief
furlough here Saturday and has
| , avvTON. June 28 —<U.B— Oreat- | VISITORS DEP..MT
|er Lawton. Ine., a community effort I Mia* Elizabeth Outhrie. Chicago,
to safeguard the city's future by en- 1111' and Mr* A O. Rlnehsrt of
Tunica, Miss. departed today
In temperature.
v. _ „ SUPPLY BILL PASSED
- ■ s*-...... r r —
the discharge of army fa-1* !7! 4 J P ‘ “ W“" d,8'|of Mra Nnrma Turpin. 707 South
Reno avenue. Miss Outhrie Is n
.....— -.....— -- . .ov w ton Officials said InmriiorHlion of the | forn,B' resident ..f ri Ren., and
lor leasalamnant P‘ '°' Callf • with strong winds and rain early. 951 army supply bill U Uic XuuU orsanlaailoii will !>.• ssk. d when 250 Ok,"bom" City and now is cm-
ror reassigiuncnt .. .* Rafail: Trace. year 1948. . I Investors are secured p ovrd ^ • '*>odelUig agency tn
.------ -------- -- niirr i
■ 30 n. m today: High, 87; low. 83; ll#rmla
“•* •»- «• «>»•
8tate of weather: Clear lo cloudy the house today passed s $3R.5f)0.2RS •
Admiral Nirnitz
SAN FRANCISCO, June 26—
—President Truman today called
In Fleet Admiral Chester W Nlm-
Itz and congratulated him on
his long string of victories in
the Pacific war against Japan.
The man who commands the
greatest fleet in world history
talked with the president in hla
suite on the fifth floor of the
Fairmont hotel.
Nlmltz would not discuss his visit
with reporters but a member of
the president's staff said:
"Admiral Nlmits was in the city
on snother matter and the presl-
chtldren paid admissions OKLAHOMA CITY. June 26—(UP)
For Monday, 175 adults and 155 A two-story fall produced only a
children took the plunge. minor scratch on the head of Lee j . , ----
Added together, records show 439 Olatt. 40, oilfield worker, who fell j hlm,,sent for hlm ,0 c0n*7stulate
adult admissions and 407 children* out of his hotel room on the sec- ™
for the two days. ond floor last night.
Olatt told police that he backed
up too close to the open window of
his hotel room and fell to the slde-
IIERE ON LEAVE
Richard Lemon, son of
Mrs.
1
ilC j go.
Catharine Lemon, 300 South Choc- walk below He was taken to an
taw avenue, who Is serving as an Oklahoma City hospital for ex-
apprentlre seaman ’.n the V-12 animation and treatment. He re-
naval training program »t the Uni- ;celved only a rut forehead from the
veisity of Oklahoma, Norman, Is fall and after the skinned place was
spending a two-week leave visiting patched up he went ou about lit*
lua mother and friends In El Reno., business.
Permit Is Issued For
Residence Construction
A building permit in the amount
of 81,000 was Issued today by Mias
Ethel Dowell, city dark.
The permit,, obtained by Frank
Wtedman. 1502 8outh Jonsen aven-
ue. Is for construction of a rrame
residence 34 by 33 feet at the Jen-
sen avenue address.
*4
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Dyer, Ray J. The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 54, No. 101, Ed. 1 Tuesday, June 26, 1945, newspaper, June 26, 1945; El Reno, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc921149/m1/1/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.