The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 54, No. 101, Ed. 1 Tuesday, June 26, 1945 Page: 4 of 6
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Four
The El Reno Daily Tribune
A B,ue K,bb*« Newspaper Serving • Clue Ribbon Community
Bailee df
El Reno, (Okla.) Daily Tribune
ty except Saturday from 207 South Rock Island avenue,
entered as eecond-claat matl matter under the act of March 3, 187#
•COOK HAKLB
Newt Editor
RAY J. DYER
Editor an? Publisher
DEAN WARD
Advertising Manager
Hollywood
Film Shop
By Patricia Clary
United Press Correspondent
David and Goliath
Tuesday, June 26, 1945
rhe ASSOCIATED PRESS la exclusively entitled to the use of re-
iMiicatlon of all the news dispatches credited to It or not credited by
ihla paper, and also to all the local news therein.
All rights of publications of special dispatches herein also are reserved.
MEMBER
SOI' I HERN NEWSPAPER
PUBLISHERS ASS’N.
MEMBER
OKLAHOMA PRESS
ASSOCIATION
DAILY SUBSCRIPTION RATES BY MAIL IN CANADIAN AND
BY CARRIER ADJOINING COUNTIES
One Week-----------—| JO Three Months_________#150
Hiree Months---------#2.25 Six Months_____________#3.00
toe Y-jar-------------#600 One Year________#600
Including Sales Tax
Tuesday, June 26, 1945
OLLYWOOD. June 26—<U.R>—'The
* ■ assistant director walked up to
the lady star's dressing room, knock*
eel. and was about to enter when a
huge wardrobe woman blocked his
way with an imperious, "NO. NO.
NO!"
Seems the lady wasn’t in any
condition to receive callers. She
was being poured into a spectacu-
I larly tight fitting pair of pants.
| Easing a lady into pants like those
J would be a delicate operations even
if she didn’t happen to have the
stylishly slender torso and grace-
ful legs of this one, name of Eve-
lyn Keyes.
In addition to the amazon who
was keeping the male sex at a
God never made anything to be wasted. He greatly treasures all his j respectable distance two other
family, even the humblest member: The Son of man came to seek
and to save that which was lost —Luke 16:10
Another Job for Eisenhower
rpHKRK will probably bt* little swivel chair relaxation for
General Eisenhower when he returns to Germany. For
present reports from there suRKest that u trouble-shootiiur
job is to be done, and done quickly.
Correspondents have sent back stories from various
German communities in the American zone of occupation
which indicate at least isolated instances of i>oor adminis-
tration by military government. Confusion and mistakes are
inevitable, ot course, and the task of finding non-Nazis to
help handle German rehabilitation must be enormous.
men from the wardrobe department |
were lending a hand with the op-
eration.
The vigilance was justified For
Miss Keyes was shivering in front
of an electric heater practically un-
adorned. That’s the way she had
to be to get the pants on.
After the assistant director was
turned away, the actress and the
three wardrobe women resumed
where they left off The actress put
her bare right leg into the right
pants leg. Everybody pulled
When the right leg was smooth-
ly encased they repeated the proee-
. . [•» "" "'<• left leg More pulling,
And yet one reads that in one town tlie Americans and hauling.
Then mine the final obstacle, as
It were. Miss Keyes was lifted right
off her feet and presently ooted
down Into the trim upper portion
of the pants. A lew minutes later,
properly booted and coated, she
stopped out onto the sound stage.
Males whistled, wolves howled.
Jean Louts, who designed the pants
as part of her Western costume in
Hie Columbia technicolor film. "The
Kansan.” smiled with satisfaction.
But Miss Keyes was all business, j
What hud that assistant director I
wanted?
Wilbur!” she called,
want something?"
Yes." lie said "I Just wanted
to tell you the schedule has been
changed. You won’t use those
pants until tomorrow.”
This Is the
_ . *nle story of to* | The Mishini-ites. whenever we ha
men who fly the hump”—carty- heard them mentioned before.
, i _ _ _ . - ---' iMCiu lllCilUOUe
wfh SZT" T, °Ver th* 'always been referred to w
hlg» Himalaya* between India and hunters, but they showed no
zz zt; uou,h'a
OUT OF THIS WORLD
XVII
have continued the Nazi food distribution system and are
still feeding the surviving Jews on half rations, and that
in another the city council, after a month of fruitless com-
plaints, has had to petition che American military gover-
nor to remove a Nazi-coddling, ex-Nazi mayor. And one
wonders how many more similar stories are to In* told.
* * #
IF they are true—and so far they are not denied—it would
seem that General Eisenhower’s announced program for
Germany isn’t going forward smoothly. For he told a
Washington press conference that a prime objective was
to get local communities functioning again, to collect case-
histories on all inhabitants, to screen them, and then to
give the anti-Nazis and neutrals responsibility and author-
ity.
That will require a military government functioning
as efficiently as a fighting force, all down the line, if vic-
tory is to be secured and the unpleasant job of rehuman-1
izing the thinking of a lot of unpleasant people is to be
done as well as possible.
As it is. our occupying forces in some areas would'
seem to be disillusioning the wrong people. Instead of mak-
ing the Nazis definite outcasts as far as the victors are
concerned, and ignoring even the Nazi sympathizers in re
storing a measure of self-regulation, they mav be persuad-
ng the non-Nazis and repentant former sympathizers that
the Americans, having fought and died to destroy Nazism
tTmS ^ Wh°le ji>b <,0“e °r eUe «aHy care
* * #
THIS is obviously untrue. But word of a few mistakes in
a few towns can spread quickly. Ami thAt can make
the long, hard job of expunging Nazism from German
thought and lile Inimitely longer and harder.
u
Behind the Scenes
In Washington
U. S. Engineers
Rebuild Bridges
"Did you I
STRASBOURG June 26 — (U.R) —
American engineers are feverishly
1 constructing bridges across this fa-
mous Rhine port, on whose activity
^ h‘vvs Impounded
On Sterilization
Neill INGHAM. England. June 26
— «UP The 71-year-old bishop of
Birmingham, Ur E W Barnes, re-
■enllv advocated at an annual
meeting of (he cooperative congress,
•i policy of "easy death and medi-
cally controlled sterilization" for
the medical defectives In Britain
The Id hop, defending his con-
victions from (he "Christian" stand-
■mini said, "As I see the matter
there Is no objection to medlcall.v-
BV PETI K KI1SON
NEA Washington ( orrespondent
WASHINGTON. D. C<-Poliihing oft the United Nation. Charter dtpend? to ° ,rMt extent
at San Francisco in a little over eight weeks constitutes au all- f°L ec®nomic recoverv
time record for speed, the way these things are measured Before the Wur coal from the Ruhr,
The impatient tendency has been to pooh-pooh tlie Conference and cereals from middle Europe, and po-
tassium from Mulhouse passed
through Strasbourg. The whole
French river fleet was 400,000 tons
greater even than its maritime fleet.
Strasbourg received a larger an-
nual tonnage than Le Havre. Tlie
Germans held a bridgehead here as
ha
as hea
no
an
] Hammel In fact they grew
(like their guests, and were muc
impressed by tlie white men’s watcl
so fa- _ es- cktaret lighters and the .1
lk"OWn' no white man Pers oil their tattered flying Jac
ever before had seen the part of ets. When Rosbert produced
the world where Rosbert and Ham- mechanical pencil and started dra
mel crashed In their ice-encrusted ing pictures on a piece of bar.
plane; and surely no two men of showing an airplane flying throug
h d h' ^ 1 got the taln- his tame spread through t
story during its many retellings at hills like wildfire. Men women anj
the cottage before Rosbert headed children from other tribes came
back to the States to recover his see these wonders. Finally one da
health and get a bone-setting Job a young boy came, an unusual
done on his shattered ankle his bright-looking youngster, and aft
plane took on a double load of ice watching Joe draw pictures for
when he tried to get back to Din- while he tried to explain that
Jan wasn’t satisfied with that; he wan*
He kept gathering ice, and at last. ^ something different, somethin
out of the grayness beyond his b*Uer He pointed to Joe and the]
windshield, a mountain peak vlr- to the bark. Then he said the Mist;
tually leaped at him. Instinctive- mi word for "name"—which w
ly. Rosbert swung hard on the coiv one *be 200 words Joe and Rklgj
trols to veer away, but It was too plck#d UP during their month wit]
late. An Instant later there was the tribe—and Ridge laughed ar
a terrific crash, and a jolt that said "Hell. Joe. he wants your autc
snapped his right ankle like ‘ a
match stick and broke the neck of Joe wrote his name on the bar'
poor Li Wong, the Chinese boy and the boy got all excited. He wi
Who had been my radio operator impatient to get his hands on 1
until that morning Ridge Ham- Joe was just about to give it to hi
me s right ankle was badly sprain- when It dawned on him what th‘
ed—making it pretty evident that bright youngster had in mind In
no right rudder had ever been fever of excitement he tore off t*
leked harder by pilot and co- corner of a map he had brougi
pi ot together. with him and wrote more word1
For three days the two men lived e*Plainlng who he and Hainm:
in the shelter of their mangled ca- were and teW*» what had half
bln, Rosbert in an agony of pain Perw“d them. The boy grabbtj
from his broken ankle. Hammel of lhe Pap<?r and ra« from the hi’
little use to himself or his friend Four days ,ater h«“ returned with J
because of his own injury as well 'e"er from the officer in comn
as the intense sub-zero cold that °* 8 British scouting force sayu
threatened to freeze them to death lhat suPPMes were on their way ar*
before the still-raging blizzard had a medical officer would soon f:
died down. They hadn't even the '°W-
(To Be ( ontinued)
all its works foi di agging along since April 25. But.
after all. great bodies move slowly, Rome wasn't
built in a day, and it’s a good thing glaciers don’t
tiy, as the tortoise didn t remark whila sliding home
past the hare.
There’s a moial for Congress in San Francisco’s
speed, howevei when you consider how long it
takes to get an v thing done on Capitol Hill.
On the same day the San Francisco Conference r*®*i*tly as Apr. 13. but the port Is
Ig still Intact, with the exception of
a few .sunken ships and battered
cranes.
Most of the bridges were blown
up, however. The emergency ones
the Americans constructed to get
their armies across the river were
too low to allow for boats, and so
they are rushing new ones
The flourishing river fleet of 12
Lesson in English
WORDS OFTEN MISUSED
opened. War Mobilization Director Fred M Vinson
appeared before a House Committee and asked for
"action now" on renewal of the Reciprocal Trade
tdhoii Agreements act, the Bretton Woods International
. . o .. , Monetary Fund and Bank, extension of the Export
Import Bank legislation and r, peal of the Johnson act prohibiting
loans to defaulting foreign g<»vti nments.
Just for the fun of it, take a look at what has happened to those
four measures on which Judge Vinson wanted so much action in a
hurry.
The Trade Agreements act was passed by the House on May 26
ilini'torl nnt in tkn T..». n t___k____ . • * *
strength to bury poor Li. bul could
only spread out his parachute and
lay It over his body. On the third
day, when their emergency rations
were Just about gone, the storm
cleared and Hammel dragged him-
self out of the ship lo discover thaf
they were within crawling distance not saV. "When I am convinc
of a steep, snow-packed decline lllat 1 “m right." Omit the fs
Studying the terrain below, Hammel 1 am- SaY "When convinced
noticed that the slope continued 1 a*‘1 1 •**>*•"
for several miles before reaching the OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: O'
scrubby black tringe of the tim- elisk Pronounce ob-e-hsk, • as
ber line. He saw a chance for them of e as in me, i as in risk, acc;
to cover that entire distance with- first syllable
Y*tr ,eet at H* OFTEN MISSPELLED Surv
crawled back to the plane, ex- lance
plained his
"■hat Germany must get from America is a new deal Wn,ml!od He point, reported out in the Se.mte June T has^nd^Tt^and ,Mnasinc. OCOnrezrar" hoaLs ^
not one in capital letters, but a complete chanve from r 1 ' 1 thnt rnir,v oft*" Wl* hear I 'hen- A« they go into the stretch, there is every probability that the to 9 000 One third of m f rm
•"* .......-............. .*■ pwCSS otTl.'"I'-.'”"! •">“-*•-1 .......sr
yci.18.
Now that troops are briiming our boys back home, we
can pick up where the British left off during World War
I. singing “The Yanks Are Coming’’—and even more cheer
ho hE™entU?,,y Tts with ,wo Pairs of l»»t* will come
back. Then, how about tossing in an extra vest and coat ?
»ui ".”iySekrrb.bd'zrthe w,r «u,n-,h- c°"n,rv
t.keth™r,LZhXpbi:lh',oM in ,h-
i,,,/!1 wganiiatlo'i of vegetarians in Cleveland has dis-
banded for the duration. Maybe eating vegetables has In*,
come too common.
Ih- t?eV\r film «hortaKe and travel restrictions i„st
th!"kyear he VacaUon H,*aP«hots we won’t have to look at
Down Memory Lane
,t , June 2«. 1920
Sr11' M,,*ho"
MiasMB8;nchf^thhhFat,hfr"on’ who has the guest of
wJSSfsst, Tri hi dui'
wrt'l S, V1'1, tav" f , M*y for „
Mr, j. o. wh“X. 2riZ*T+rET Mr
■yMv? tjrjras ^srr, »«••«-
‘A“^a2SW{
Mrs. Bert Cuiiev \ll-v m •’ Mrs. Forrest Nave
Pool, of OklZymib?lty*°”k‘ Mrs Ui"kl" »■»' Mr, /h!
June 26. 19.15
.....
City policemen
1L Ifccllve in mind or body, and of tlie
parents' relief when it dies "
Dr Barnes warned tliat "bad
racial stocks” were a growing anxi-
ety io thoughtful men in every
country where Western civilization
prevailed. He said he could offer
no clue how these bad stocks had
arisen, bul he had noticed that
calllc, breeding at random, pro-
duced "scrub" cattle. He said that
It was now an offense for a farmer
to keep a ’scrub’ buU. and Implied
that lhe same policy should be
adopted In human society.
Bishop Barnes reflected tliat In
"'ber centuries defective children
could not survive the prevalent,
harsh conditions, but today our
humane social service* tended to
prelect them, problem children
mowing up to produce problem fam-
ilies.
Dr Barnes concluded that war
had eliminated the best on the bat-
tlefields. leaving the weak, feeble-
minded youth behind to prosper and
spawn He foresaw a world of
recklessly breeding sub-humans Uv-
Ini' In miserable poverty unless
civilised man helped nature elim-
inate lhat wldeh was unfit to sur-
vive.
act becomes a law. tugboats have disappeared Eightv
-...... thousand river boats, some of them
1 Hrf"°n Wood* measure passed the House on June 7 but is now badly damaged, are being repaired.
toil M|* in Senate Committee hearings with no indication of when
it will be considered by the Senate.
Export Import Bank legislation, containing provision for full repeal
of the Johnson act. has just been introduced in the House. The delay
here has not been the fault ol Congress but of the Foreign Economic
Administration, which took two months to draft the bill it wanted
C ongress to consider. There is an even chance that nothing will be
done about this legislation before the end of the present session when
Congress goes home for vacation.
| HE San Francis*^ jzpeed is in fact almost equal to the best that
Congress has >hn*/fi since the early days of the New Deal The
record is probably the passage of the original Lend-Lease bill in 1941.
It became a law in just two months and a day after it was requested
by President Roosevelt. Some of the war appropriation bills have
been pushed through Congress in u little over a month, but these
records have been made only after weeks of hearing by Appropria-
tions sub-committees which theoretically examine every item before
approving.
however.
Because Strasbourg port was fed
1 by a vast river network In the tn-
I terior of France, as well as by the
Rhine. It is too early to say when
I It can resume full activity At the
moment canals in Prance are func-
tioning only partly or not at all.
Only a portion of the Rhone-Rhtne
I canal is In use The Mame-Rhine
ranal is being repaired and It Is
hoped to reopen it for traffic next
October.
----- Observe tlie el and the
plan to Rosbert. and r*.
un'^wi^i^s of^aX^'!^ ^RONYMS: Hide cover, co
Then they tore up a couple of floor- ’ SecreU“ SCn*"’ dli«u,“
boards from the plane’s cabin and suppr*“vV V
set out on probably the most cuius- WORD STUDY: “Use a we •
sal sleigh ride in the history of that lhrw“ llmes and 11 Is yours.” I»
sport. us increase our vocabulary by ms
All day long the two boys work- ‘er‘ng °n“ Word ***<h da> Todaf
ed their way down the mountain . AKriTUDE; natural or C1
from one ice-capped ridge to an- dwl‘"'d‘“R**1'' ,oy a P“*llcular pij
other. They would crawl on hands
and knees from tlie foot of one de-
cline to the top of another, then
mount their individual "sleds." and. Alfalfa Hit By
pushing over the edge, drop hun- I
dreds of yards m a few breath-
taking seconds. i STILLWATER. June 26 — (UR)
• * * This has been a season of destri
Rosbert had a pocket compass U,v* leaf ut <
with him, and after they reached plains D* K s'ar’ Chester,
the timber line they held to a homa A “nd 14 coll***‘ Plant pa’]
course roughly southwest, figuring
pose. He was a boy of remarka*
aptitude." -Macaulay. 1
1
thgt It would take them—If they
lived long enough—to the neighbor-
Mowlng a little more frequei:
than ta usually recommended
Look and Learn
1. Which slate In the LTnited
'Kiate lends in coal production?
2 Whnt is the mean altitude of
the District of Columbia?
3 What Is a dodo?
4 Wliat is meant by "natural Ice?"
5. What kind of game Is roque?
ANSWERS
1 Pennsylvania.
2. 150 feet.
3 A flightless bird, now extinct,
related to the pigeons, but larger
than a turkey.
* ,np '"Ken from frozen rlvm,
. and ixiiids m the winter time.
3 A form of croquet.
W. C. T. U. PLANS DRIVE
MEKIDIAN. Miss—OLR)—'The MU-
sissippi division of the Woman's
Christian Temperance union Is mak-
ing plans for an extensive member-
ship drive to strengthen it* postwar
mobilization Mrs J M Combs of
Meridian, corresponding stcretary
of the W C. T. U„ says the Mis-
sissippi campaign will be a part of
the national drive, which is to be
known as "Family Week "
Food Cargoes Moving
From Gulf to Europe
hood of DUijan. There was a hun- Kalva8e 'eaves that otherwise woj
dred miles between them and the 1:111 *° l*M’ *rou,ld aad thus
field, however, the unexplored, un-
mapped territory of the Mishmi
Hills, which are inhabited by aborig-
inal tribes of Mishml-ites.
the hay yield.
-
ONE BAR EKOM FREEDOM]
f GLDWATER. Mieli -(UJh—W
SECOND CHRISTMAS BEST
KALAMAZOO Mich -<UJ»>
vate First Class Theodore E. Trelf -------•» ”“v or mew i eo into a clearing and saw a small — — — ------
°! Purred the Christ- ^,1^a#n)' H^d_'he other gulf ports Is j mud hut with a wisp of smoke curl- V^th^ilaw” hTwm^i
the failure to .support his wile and sfl
mas in June which he celebrated food for starving Europe. It was re
recently to the real Christmas he P°rted here today
spent in a German prison camp
When he reached home he found
that all the presen’s sent to him in
Ships of the merchant marine,
which formerly carried guns, tanks, |
planes and other articles of
ing out through
I thatched roof.
a hole In
, month-old child.
Oermany. Including candy and fruit: are now "p wlth S™10 wheat,
cake, had been returned and were cotn suaar *°ya beans, cattle feed
Sally’s Sallies
By WlIMam ferg
piled under a "Christmas" tree.
Private Brewer Abroad
By Dave Bn«n
lakes
Keller,
<iuc# th. p*,,n to
proper li,htg. it w« wi,h ini'
Problem a Day
A stationer bought some note-
books to sell at #1 20 a dozen, but
d>*’ to increased overhead expen.ee
lie raised the price of 25^, At lhe
increased price how many note-
books could be bought for |1 oo?
ANSWER
» Explanation - Take 26% a
1 20; add to 1 20; divide |1 by #t »0
multiply by 11.
■
rtf'
--— ' ' - ‘' - I»u*
H#y, you! Kindly croM ov*r lilt* the reot Df uil” Jf*>
and canned good
Chester H. Marshall, gulf roast
director of the war shipping ad-
ministration. said that in Mav half
the volume of New Orleans and the
other gulf ports was allocated to
food aupplies bound for all parts of
: Europe, HiHKiii ■■
The cargoes, aboard the old vic-
tors of the battle for transporta-
tion. the Liberty ships, are moving
to the Mediterranean and Black
sea ports, Italy, the Balkans. Rus-
sia, France, Belgium. Holland and
Britain.
Biggest single cargo moving out
of New Orleans Is grain. The May-
total was 40 ships, which carried
an estimated 340 000 tons
( oach Is Instructed
To Come Hijfht Ahead
ALVA. June 26 —•,f»— a small
thing such ae mlxed-up telephone
numbers didn't stop the Van Bu-
ren. Ark., football team from In-
vading the Woods county wheat
fields recently.
The Van Buren ooarh called 448.
Instead of the county agent's num-
ber- 468 to offer the squad's ser-
vice In the wheat harveat.
Bert Need of J C Reed and Com-
pany. answering the 44# number as-
sured the roach that the far mars
would more than welcome him aad
hie team up for harvest.
_njJ
I
'A
<1
I" 'I-VIn. . WutlJ ,*1.1. nw.vtg
‘You didn’t tell me to meet you at six. Bill. You tc
me to meet you at imv«il ’
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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/m1/4/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.