The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 53, No. 217, Ed. 1 Friday, November 10, 1944 Page: 4 of 6
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Oui
El Reno, (Okla.) Daily Tribune
Friday, November
1
The El Reno Daily Tribune
A Blue Ribbon Newspaper Serving t Blue Ribbon Community
■sued dally except Saturday from 207 South Rock Island avenue,
tod Ottered as second-class mall matter under the act of March 3, 1879.
Hollywood
Film Shop
RAY J. DYER
Editor and I'ublislier
BUDGE IIARI.E
News Editor
DEAN WARD
Advertising Manager
The ASSOCIATED PRESS is exclusively entitled to the use of re-
|Mt»teat Inn of all the news dispatches credited to It or not credited by
tttu paper, and also to nil Ihe local news therein.
All lights of publications of specif dispatches herein also are reserved.
MEMBER
MITTHERN NEWSPAPER
PUBLISHERS ASS'N.
MEMBER
OKLAHOMA PRESS
ASSOCIATION
DAILY SUBSCRIPTION RATES HY MAIL IN CANADIAN AND
BY CARRIER ADJOINING COUNTIES
One Week ____________I 20 Three Months---------9160
Hirer Months___________92 25 Six Months-------------*3.00
One Year________________*800 One Year-------------WOO
Including Sales Thx
Friday. November 10. 1044
By Ernest Foster
United Press Correspondenf
You will confirm yourself in your faith by expressing it: For with the
heart man believetli unto righeouanesa, and with the mouth con-
fession Is made of salvation.—Romans 10:10.
Peace and Politics
rpHF discussion of American membership in the united
|YOLLYWOOD. Nov 10 — (UP) -
a1 Whatever happened to H J.
Braun ell, or Bninell, or Bennell, no
one will ever know except his fam-
ily and immediate circle of friends.
More than 10 yenrs ago he scrawl-
ed his undecipherable John Han-
cock In a black ledger at Metro-
Ooldwyn-Mayer studios with a tre-
mendous flourish and labeled it.
"the signature of a future famous
man.” •
Mr. Beaunell. or whatever his1
name was. thought he was making
history when he wrote it. But fame
passed him by. Hollywood fame, at
least.
The black book is nothing more
than prop hotel register. You've
probably seen it in one picture or ,
in-other. M-C.-M now Is using it In
"Gentle Annie,” ft western film
with James Craig and Donna Reed
in tire lend romantic roles. |
Tire ledger lias n history. The
fly leaf reveals it was first used by
the old King Vidor company in pro-
duction of "The Mob." There's a
date, Feb. 14. 1927.
But there's nothing of real im-
portance that has been written in
. nations security organization hits been showing symp-
toms of becoming hotly political, despite* both major par-
ties’ official policy of keeping it non-partisan I erhaps
these svmptoms were induced bv tin* recent campaign,
and will subside now that it is over. Hut they revealed.....
some odd assumptions and conclusions which probabl> jit all these years. There are some
Still exist and which could frustrate our efforts toward, early tick-tack-toe games, a few
si ill nxi.it, no amateurish sketches, n whole page
world peace. , of elegant Spencerian script, a full
The most prevalent of these seems to be that mem-
bership in the united nations would give the president of
the united states sole (lower to declare war. It is doubtful
that those who made the charge looked very far into the
future, but their assumption obviously would apply to an>
president of any party, good or bad, now or later.
The assumption ignores the proposed 11-member united
nations security council and seems to consider that this
“declaration of war” would be a president’s private affair.
And, with i'll its talk about “rushing our troops into bat-
tle," it also ignores the possibility that the united nations
might first try to solve a menace to world peace by means
short of war.
* :ii *
HIT the recommendations of the Dumbarton Oaks con-
B ference specifically suggests that the security council,
having determined that a threat to peace exists, “should
be empowered to determine
what diplomatic, economic,
or other measures not involving the use of armed lorce
should Im* used to bring about a settlement.
The Dumbarton Oaks suggestions are not final. This
has been repeatedly stressed. There will Im* discussion and
decision among prospective member nations before the
united nations come into being, in this country that means
discussion and final decision by the senate. And that de-
cision will surely include in its conditions of our member-
ship it stipulation of how our member of the security
council shall 1k> appointed, and what powers he shall have.
* * *
INCIDENTALLY. Senator Tom Connally of Texas provided
an interesting footnote recently to this frightening sub-
ject of a president's “war-making” powers. During a sen-
ate debate the scholarly Texan recited some of the in-
stances where a president has sent our troops or ships
to foreign soil without declaration of war or the advice and
consent of the senate.
The list is too long to repeat here, but it includes more
than 50 “incidents” covering a period of lilt years. These
forces wore dispatched for icasons of security, protection
or retaliation by almost all of our presidents, weak and
strong, from James Monroe to Calvin Coolidge.
page of nothing except the numeral
200 repented over nnd over agnin.
There men couple of pnges list-
ing names of small cities, by states,
and crossed out. There's a section
of stock transactions—mining, Bank'
of Italy. Gilmore Oil. Yellow Pine. |
Central Counties, nnd so on. This I
would have been around 1929. mast
likely.
Some items make sense. There's
a record of a baseball pool for the
week ending July 2. with the year
omitted, won by the Chicago Na-
tionals with 68 runs.
There are some signatures—Wal-
lace Ross of Butter. Jimmy Mur-
ray. Pat Cummlng. Chester Robin-
sen. Curley Edwards. Homer
Rhodes, repented Rhoads ns If he
couldn't make up his mind
And there's "Russell Ash. bom
Aug. 21. 1911," nnd "This is the
life, when do we eat." signed Ra-
mon Cordell.
* * *
|>OH HOPE'S suspension was offI-
M dal today, Paramount studio
officials said, because ne refused to
play In a picture that was suppased
to have gone before the cameras
last Monday .
A spokesman said Hope made two
of the three Paramount pictures
called for under his contract this
year and then told the studio he
did not want to make any more
films in 1944
YOU GCTT/CfffllNK CL
(By. Siankij (poky
or a*
Coprrifhl, 1044,
NEA Servlet. lit.
THE STORY: Ginger was right in
prophesying that Reggio's attack of
dyspepsia would leave him eockier
Ilian ever, lie berates Kabateck
for not working hard enough hut
refuses lo let him open an offlee.
* * *
XV
A-. time went on my meetings
in an emergency. Hidir
I hailed the waiter as he
"Book." I said. "We wt
to that table over there
arrange it?"
“Sorry. We’ve been
for some regulars. And
isetl it to a couple of ge
the bar if the party dc
I with Ginger were greatly simpli- up in five minutes.
fled. She had hit upon a system
that we called "Malsle.”
Muisie O’Driscoll had been one
of the girls in the line at Minsky's
"One of them drinking
milk?” I managed to say
"Yes."
I beckoned to him to c
when Ginger had first started out He leaned down.
"I don’t want him t
I there. Maisie was the third from
the left. Ginger the fourth. That st„n ldn, Get him oi
kind of a setup makes for either j-jj ma|(e WOrth your v
In this case
“I'm sorry. I've alrei
ised him the table.”
This was no time for
: rivalry or friendship,
they lilt it off.
Wliat objections could Boggio have
if Gihfer suddenly decided to see "How mucli did he gh
a whole lot of her friend who had inquired. Tire waiter he
married and settled "Come on!” I snapp
Behind the Scenes
In Washington
BY PETER EDSON
NEA Staff Correspondent
Norman Cade!
Recalls Dec. J
Describes Reactions
At Pearl Harbor
NORMAN. Okla
Nov.
'T'HE presidential executive order authorizing Army’s Air Transport
Command and the Navnl Air Transport Service to cany civilian
passengers for pay if their travel is in furtherance of the war effort
has stirred up some of the enmmercial airline people quite a hit.
What goes on here? they would like to know. Is
the government starting an airline of its own to
compete with the commercial airline companies'.’
Is the war being used as an excuse to put over
government ownership? Is the administration pre-
paring for a "one chosen instrument” international
aviation policy and trying to put over a govern-
ment-owned airline as the chosen instrument?
If ATC and NATS have more transport airplanes I dock<t. ‘„~eTn„ ^'jin 'them"
than they know what to do with, why don t they
give them lo tho eommerciul airlines and let them
haul ihe passengers, either as private business or
Idsnn as coRtrnrt carriers for the Army or Navy? and so
fortji.
These questions involve not only operations of Pan American Air-
lines and American Export Airlines, who were in the international
air business before the war, Inil also American, Eastern, Transcon-
tinental, Northwestern, Northeastern. United and other domestic air-
lines which have done contract flying for Army and Navy.
meanwhile
down? . much?”
And then one evening we be- *Ten dollars." he said,
came reckless. Busier than ever. j fumbled in my poc
j Boggio had told Ginger he'd be out out „ wad of notes and
until lale. three fives. I slipped thi
"Let's go to the Scheherazade." willim hand,
sire suggested. "Tell him you're sorrj
It wo- u flashy place Tire tables party is arriving. Th
were arranged In tiers around the phoned you. Give him
dance floor, enabling everyone to ten bucks, when he go
get a good view of the floor show jou another fifteen."
that went on intermittently through- He bowed, shoved the
out tire evening Our table was a tray, nnd scurried off.
on tlie highest tier, on a sort of
mezzanine. Tire Scheherazade wasn't
very big but the walls were prac- |
ticnlly all mirror and when half a
dozen girls kicked their legs it look -
ed as if there were millions of them. I
Ginger nnd I were in excellent
spirits and after a couple of cock-
I tails became positively boisterous.
"Hello Maisie." she grinned
"Hello Ginger.”
She turned to face the mirror wa!s liunlt) au
After a while I mi
t enough courage to look i
rer. Down at the bar
was arguing with Boggio
stand it and closed my <
An eternity passed a
felt a tap on my shot,
waiter was standing besi
"They're gone."
I slumped back in my
didn't move for a few n
over. I
<U.R> i across from us. waiter coughed and I ,
"Don't you think we make a pret- self together t gave him
ty good combination?" I Id proralsed and also
"You bet we do. With my looks cjleck
and your brains we’re about the
—It was a pretty dull paper which
naval aviation cadet B R Hart
was looking at that Sunday morn-
ing in Pe.trl Harbor, he recalls.
Lounging on his bunk (hat morn- i smartest couple in the joint,
lna. Hart looked through the win- I We both lauthed and then some-
dow to see n group of excited ship- j thing happened. Ginger turned to . ,
mates pointing toward the navy dry ! lo°k at herself in the mirror again ' '* f
X TT______ 4 • I o»%rl tho lonoh Vtevv fA«„ LHJ\A II until II lilt Mr up 1
We went down to the
and i threw Ginger's c<
I wasn't in any mood f
A CLOSE checkup with government aviation authorities seems to
indicate that fears of the comrtiercial air transport interests are
"When we saw thp bombs fall
end the planes almost overhead,
with the wing emblems pialnly vis-
ible. none of us could believe our
own eyes," the former murine en-
listed man says in telling of the
Dec. 7. 1941, incident. "It was one
of those things the eyes can see.
but the mind refuses to grasp."
The strafing, when It came, was
up
the door. Then I put G
It was only after it 1
down the street that I w
gered over to my car.
(To He Continue
Cameraman Gives
Admiral Laii^h
MYITKYINA. Burma, Nov. 10-
<U.R>—When Admiral Lord Louis
Mountbatteii. supreme commander
of tlie southeast Asia command, re-
_________ ________. ____ _ ____________ _ _____ .. teal enough; and Hart, without
groundless. The presidential executive order authorizing the ATC j thinking twice, dived for a hlbis-
und NATS to carry passengers for pay is made necessary by the pres- 1 cue hedge nearby. Instead of soft
ent military situation and by existing U. S. law which controls licens-
ing of commercial air carriers in international service.
Take the military situation first. Commercial airlines are not
authorized to operate from most military air buses overseas. Foreign
governments simply won't let them in. Difficulties of getting a com-
mercial plane cleared for entry into many countries arc tremendous,
though military planes can come right in. and welcome.
A second point is that the armed services feel they must keep
rontrol of all transport planes available, for possible emergency use.
Lesson in En
This is a decision with which no civilian can argue.
A THIRD military factor is that surface transportation systems of
liberated countries like France are completely wrecked—rail,
inland waterway. Plane; thus become the only system of
A North Dakota mail has a six-foot Ix'nnl lie’s all set
to wear his Christmas tie.
There is one best way to save not
lives. Buy more war bonds!
only money, but
There’s a report that the Nazis plan to go under*
ffftuind. We’re ready to lend a hand.
Colonel Gordon Seagrave. U. S.
army signal corps photographers
crowded around to take n picture
of the pair.
Mountbattcn's photogenic smile
turned into a series of loud laugh-
ing when lie observed the antics
earth, nine inches of mud and
water came up to splatter his
freshly laundered uniform. That
was enough; spluttering and drip-
ping, he left the shelter of the
hibiscus and stayed in Ihe open
; lor the lest of Ihe attack
In a few moments, carbines were
issued and more than 300 Ma-
rines began firing as the Rttack-
ors circled back again. Hart fig-
ured lie fired more than 150 shots.
The carbines were credited with
i three zeroes.
Hart, 23 veal's old, is .stationed
at the Norman naval air station.
I and the laugh froze on her face.
* . * *
"Wliat’s the matter?"
She didn't answer and her face
Was white as a sheets. I followed
her gaze. Tlie mirror she was look-
ing into reflected the one facing
the bar downstairs. My gaze slow-
ly traveled along several figures
seated on the high Stolls, then my
stqmach turned to lead. Holding
a glass of milk in one hand and WORDS OFTEN MISi
talking excitedly to a man whose not 3®v, "Such .iction
.face I couldn't see was Boggio. All tlse but folly.” Say. "Si
j he had to do was look till and he'd
see us.
Practically paralyzed. I slowly
turned hack to Ginger again.
“Oh. Leo," she murmured. "I'm
scared. Get me out of this. Do
something, please!"
"Shut up!" I snapped. "And don’t
move."
It was hard enough for me to fig-
in just about two months every Christmas toy will
have been stopped on or (ripped over several times.
Look at the bright side! All that stands between ns
and a hot old time is the rest of the winter.
motor,
cently paid a visit to ihe hospital1 transportation that will work.
of "Burma Surgeon" Lieutenant j On Ihe legal side, there is now only one line authorized by Ihe
Civil Aeronautics Board and by Congress to engage in overseas inter-
national air transport. Tlie idea of granting temporary permits to other
carriers has been blocked by on internal airlines row. In the meantime,
CAB is holding hearings on applications of other companies that want
to get into this business, pending decision by Congress on whether
this country shall be represented by one chosen instrument carrier
or by a number of competing companies.
If Congress makes its decision enrly in (tic winter, CAB will be
. Corporal Tommy Amer Las An- ready with its first award in Ihe spring, and it should follow with one
u'elos CnlH decision on each new route, every nvo months. .........................
When these awards are made, ATC and NATS should be in a position Hatchett Memorial" fund bv
to turn over to the commercial airlines established routes with all
facilities ready for service.
Finally, the President’s executive ordre expires within one year.
Memorial Fund
Is Established
The Pilgrims celebrated with wild turkeys. The only
wild thiiifr for us will be the price.
Down Memory Lane
Nov. 10, I Mil
The cornerstone of the new Rock Island avenue Meth-
odist church was laid todaj with impressive ceremonies in
the presence of a large concourse ot friends.
Lee Rohde attended the hasketball
fisher last evening.
trame at Kinp-
Amer. with three cameras strung
about his person, n carbine strapped
to ills shoulder, and an Australian
bush hat UUed over one eye. looked
like n one-man army as lie jumped
around clicking flash-bulbs and jell-
ing to ills cohorts.
Mountbatten turned to his aide.
Major General John Jones. Green-
ville. Tenn., and said. ’Major. I want
a picture of that lad there, who is
taking my picture."
With the "supremo" had his party
of British, American and Chinese
generals looking on. Amer, a Chin-
ese-American. who attended John
H. Francis Polytechnic highschool in
Los Angeles, seriously put his cam-
eras to one side and posed for his
lordship.
NORMAN, Nov. 10 —(Special) -
Establishment of the John Archer
Dr.
Coyne H Campbell of the Insti-
tute of Neuropsychiatry, Oklahoma
City, for tlie advancement ol med-
ical research in the Univer ity of
i Oklahoma school of medicine, has
GI’S GIVE AUTOGRAPHS RAISES WELFARE BUDGET
CARTERVILLE, 111 — <u.R)_Major CHICAGO — <U.R>— The National been announced by President Oeo-
Jerry Boyd of Cartervllle. who was Jewish Welfare board has voted, 8 rse L Cross’
one of tlie first three American sol- s1’520’340 budget for serv’lce t0 thf / Funds will be used in the crea-
armed forces, to returned veterans ^jon ancj ^unpoit of a research fei-
dters to enter Paris through the ;md to youth at home. The 1945 • lowshlp or fellowships in the field
main south gate. Port d’Orleans budget was increased by $348.000.! cf biochemistry under the aus-
has written his wife that his group Irving Edison, council chairman. ,uceK 0f tf,e University of Okla-'
autographed everything they could said, because of the larger number j^ina Research Institute,
write on for the waiting Parisians, of Jewish soldiers overseas, the in-
even to an old-style American dol- crease ol wounded in Jewish hos-
lar bill that one of them had kept pitals and the growing number of
since the last war. veterans.
Private Breger Abroad
By Dave Breger
I*lank Hensley has sold his residence pro|>erty at !121 LOOK and I Pfirn
North Rock Island avenue to J. Y. Morris, a Rock Island
employe, and has moved to property near Webster school
build imr.
One of the rapidly growing districts of the city at
present is Robbins addition. More thon 20 buildings have
been erected there recently and more are now under con-
struct ion.
Nov. 10. 1934
Reno unit of the American Legion auixiliary
ther honor in the sixth district when Mrs.
Guv C. Knarr was elected historian during the qimrteriy
meeting at Anadarko. *
The El
received another
Two prisoners who escaped from Southwestern federal
reformatory at El Reno Friday afternoon were captured
Friday night in a cane field two miles south of the insti-
tution. Police dogs, especially trained for guarding pur-
poses. were instrumental in effecting the capture.
1. In 1883. what newspaper .made
melodramatic appeal to the mass-
es in large type and bold head-
lines, in opposition to conserva-
tive newsoapers?
2. What is a drone?
3. What part of.France was set-
tled by the Vikings?
4. What have the following in
common; <a> Nabob, (oi Croesus,
(c) Midas?
5. What painter’s name was used
for a woman’s hat?
ANSWERS
1. ‘ The New York World."
2. A male bee that gathers no
honpy. Hence, an idler.
3. Normnndy.
4 Wealth.
5. Gainsborough's.
El Reno Indians overcame a 12 point lead to win their
annual grudge game from their Canadian county rivals,
the Yukon Millers, Friday night bv the close score of
14 to 12.
Word was received today from Colonel and Mrs. James
E. Shelley that they would sail Sunday, Nov. 11, from
Wilmington, Calif., on a five-month cruise around the
world. The Shelleys formerly were stationed at Fort Reno.
MILKS GOAT FROM BED
KITTERY, Me <u.P> — Russell |
Milliken, 11. of Kittcry has a pet!
goat which is very devoted to him. |
In fact, the animal won't allow,
anyone but Russell to milk him. So
when Russell was iU and confined
to his bed recently, the goat had
to be brought Into the bedroom
at each milking time.
Dr. Hatchett joined the staff of
the medical school in 1911 and
continued as professor of obstetrics
until his death Aue. 15. 1940. He
was named professor emeritus Feb
2, 1933. Dr. Campbell received a
bachelor of arts degree from the
university in 1924.
Problem a Da/
is nothing else than fo
OFTEN MISPRON
Malleable. Pronounce
first a as in at. and
lablcs, not mal-a-b’l.
OFTEN MISSPELLED,
tious Observe the six i
SYNONYMS Speed i
locity, quickness, expedit
ness, rapidity.
WORD STUDY “Usi
ure out what we were going to do three tinvs and lt ls j
without having Ginger throw a til. us increase 0tn vocal
In tliis lousy Hall ol Minors we mastering one word e.icl
hud as much chance of remaining d;|y>s word; DENUNCIV
unseen as a couple of goldfish- ot denouncing, or accu
Finally I leaned forward. "Where's holy. “Then followed
the little gills’ room?" I whisper- yer’s bitter denunciation
cd. "You might slip in there.”--
• Right back of you,” she answer- tJniversitV Prof*
ed. She was about to rise but I ... •
slopped her. 4 ODipilmg Hotel
“It’s no good. When you walk NORMAN. Nov. 10 —
past that mirror you'll be smack William H Butteifield.
In his field of vision. Just stay put of business communicatl
nnd look at the menu.” University of Oklahoma.
* • * thor of a series of articl
It was one of those huge affairs, ing Hotel Business by L
the size of a tabloid. She did as appearing in Hotel M
she was told and I continued to magazine,
think. Maybe we could slip over to At the conclusion of
a less prominent spot? But the the material will be pub
place was packed Only one table book with the same tit
was empty and it was marked "Re- of the articles. It will
served." It wasn’t much better than field’s ninth book in tl
ours but you clutch at any straw, business communication.
Amufr In P«
YOUNG ACTRESS
HORIZONTAL 50 Suffix
1,6 Pictured 51 Decigram
child actress 52 Rodent
10 Right 53 Upon
Worthy (ab) 54 She is a -
11 Native metal actress
12 Edward (ab.) 55 Tops of waves
A can mow a lawn in 4 hours
8 in 5 hours. C in 6 14 hours
and D in 10 hours. How many
hours would it take the lour if 1
they all worked together?
ANSWER
1.4 < plus > hours. Explanation—
A does 1 4 the work in 1 hour. B
1 5, C 4 25, and D 1 10; add
thes" four fractions; divide into 1
13 East Indies
(nb.)
14 Kitchen
utensil
15 Seasoned with
salt
16 Exist
18 Paid notices
19 Half an em
20 Recording sec- 8 Harvest
VERTICAL
1 Rocking bed
2 Possesses
3 Organ of
smell
4 Persia
5 Long fish
17 Age
25 Is capable
26 Strike
27 Lyric poem
28 Tree fluid
29 Beverage
6 Sidelong look 30 Make a
7 Sums up mistake
33 Frozen North
36 Bind
38 Entil'd
40 Every
41 Votini
42 Dry
43 Heavi
body
44 Netw<
nerve
Farm Butchers’ Warned
Against Carelessness
STILLWATER. Nov. 1U (U.fi)—
With cold weather due soon and
, hog killing weather just aroun"
(the corner. Dr. DeWitt Hunt, saf-
ety specialist at the Oklahoma A
i and M. college, warns against
' carelessness this season witli the
i farm butchering instruments.
It's just as essy and a lot safer
j to make certain tnat every pos-
sible precaution against accidents
is taken, he thinks
retary (ab.)
21 By
22 Lord Lieu-
1 tenant (ab.)
23 Calcium
(symbol)
24 Reverberate
28 Let it stand
31 Help
32 Pertaining to
air (prefix)
33 Before
(prefix)
34 Segment
36 Transpose
(ab.)
37 Egyptian sun
god
39 Frozen water
41 Father
43 Senior (ab.)
45 Balance (afc.)
46 Creel: letter
47 Decorativ*
49 Lubricant
9 Lead
14 Friend
35 Takes course 45 Shoe
of exercise 48 Part (
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Dyer, Ray J. The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 53, No. 217, Ed. 1 Friday, November 10, 1944, newspaper, November 10, 1944; El Reno, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc922057/m1/4/: accessed April 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.