The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 54, No. 216, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 13, 1945 Page: 1 of 6
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I OCT.
i
DEC.
8
The El Reno Daily Tribune
OCT.
f?
DEC.
8
,ingle Copy, Five Cents
(U B MEANS UNITED PRESS
El Reno, Oklahoma, Tuesday, November 13, 1945
UP) MEANS ASSOCIATED PRESS
'New Premier
Takes Control
'in Indonesia
British Blasting At
Nationalists In
Heart of Socrabaja
.BATAVIA. Java, Nov. 13 —UP)—
Van Sjahrir. described as a mod-
4ate with whom the Dutch are
|tely to deal, became premier of
i ie unrecognized Indonesian re-
kiblic today as British forces blast-
at Indonesian nationalists in the
art of Soerabaja.
I Sjuhrir's selection as premier by
le cabinet meant that the natlon-
Ists had decided on a new gov-
I nmental system under which
Resident Soekarno apparently will
Kvc but u minor role. The Dutch
lid refused to deal with Soekarno.
IjA 36-year-old Socialist leader,
alirlr retained temporarily the
•irt folios of home affairs and for-
■;n affairs in the nationalist cabi-
3jahrir said in an interview he
Imld make sharp changes in the
| binct. Soekarno. Just returned
om nationalist rallies at Sogjakar-
seemed destined for a subord-
late position and the new prime
Jiiiister was expected to allot much
Ider powers to his ministers. Elec-
Inis were planned before Jan. 31.
Troops Advance
■British troops fought their way
]to the center of Soerbaja behind
prolliin aerial and artillery barrage
puy 'and official sources predicted
nationalist resistance in the
ly would be crushed before the
tek-end.
JiNoel Baker. British minister of
litc for foreign affairs, told the
■use of commons "that no serious
(tbreaks of fighting have occurred
lewhere in Java but the Soerabaja
luation remains tense” and British
enforcements are still arriving,
plbournc radio heard at San
|aneisco, reported.)
British hondquarters spokesmen
Id infantrymen of tlie fifth Indian
vision penetrated into the modern
Isiness section of Socrabaja, in Uie
lart of the east Java naval base.
fTlic bulk of the Indonesian cx-
|miists were believed concentrated
the central area and dispatches
lini the city said they were being
listed out of their barricades by
Lint-blank artillery fire and aerial
Jmbardment.
Large Areas Aflame
triie Dutch Aneta news agency
■d large areas of Soerabaja were
Blame from the British shelling and
Jat an 8,000 Japanese ship in the
lrbor caiiglit fire yesterday.
■Casualties among the nationalists
■patently were running high. Brit-
[i officers said groups of as many
1,000 Indonesians were being
|token up by the steady ground
d air hammering.
Seven Indian soldiers were wound-
in yesterday's fighting, but it
indicated that British lossef
I re mounting as the advance car-
\ .Did You Hear
f. 'IJIEST R. ORIMES, 506 West
'''q /'/a ''S^dson street, machinist’s
“ ^class in the navy.
. -gortant part in the
0fK' *k""t air wing No. 1
during k of the war
when th. tty piled up
a record th. £ been re-
vealed by the . frrom Korea
to China and Fo.imosa, even to
Japan Itself, the air wing helped
keep the Japs In confusion while
other fleet units pounded the
enemy from Okinawa to Tokyo,
and while her own planes teamed
with army airmen to rain de-
struction on the Jap homeland.
The Japs made their most fran-
tic effort to disrupt the opera-
tions of fleet air wing No. 1 at
Okinawa, turning loose an almost
continuous stream of suicide
fliers at, its base. But the navy's
records show’ that the Jap effort
was in vain. The wing is credited
in those records witli sending
more than 175,000 tons of Japan-
ese shipping to the bottom with
its Mariner, Coronado and Priva-
teer planes, damaged at least
that much more tonnage and
shot down more than 40 enemy
planes. Units of the wing still
were harassing the Japs from
their base at Okinawa when
Japan surrendered.
Russian Army
In Manchuria
Is Withdrawing
Chinese Communists
And Nationalists
Locked in Civil War
Volume 54, No. 216
El Reno's Undefeated Juniors Playing Benefit Game Here Tonight
Damage Actions
Seek $101,995
Gas Company Named
In Three Suits
In three damage actions filed
in Canadian county district court
today against Oklahoma Natural
Gas company, plaintiffs are seek-
ing Judgments totaling *102,995. it
was disclosed by petitions filed
in the office of Frank Taylor,
court clerk.'
One of the actions, iiled by Ruth
H. Harlan of Wilmington, Del.,
administratrix of the estate of J.
A. Snelling. Is asking *50,000 dam-
ages for SnelUng's death.
Another, also filed by Mrs. Har-
lan, as administratrix of the es-
tate of Ivery dco Crook, seeks
$50,000 damages for the death of
the 13-month-old Infant.
The third, filed by Mrs. Lucille
Crook, asks *2.995 damages for in-
juries suffered.
Fire Followed Explosion
The court actions are the result
of a fire which followed a gas
explosion last Mar. 17.
Tlie fire occurred at the home |
of Mr. and Airs. Clarence Snell-
ing, located at the intersection of I
Sunset drive and the country club I
road, at the west edge of El Reno. :
Ivery Cleo Crook, granddaugh- |
ter of Mr. and Mrs. Snelling, suf- j
! 'ered third degree bums which |
:aused her death a few hours after |
he explosion and fire.
The infant's mother, Mrs. Lu
CHUNGKING. Nov. 13— tU.R)—
Russia's Red Banner army was
reported today to have begun a
mass withdrawal from Manchuria,
on the southern approaches of
which more than 2.000.000 Chinese
Communists and nationalist troops
were locked in undeclared civil
war.
Informed sources said main
units of the Soviet forces in Man-
churia were pulling out in three
directions, leaving the occupation
issue up to the warring Chinese
factions.
The Russians were reported mov-
ing in force from Manchuria into
tlie Soviet occupation zone of
northern Korea, to the great Rus-
sian base of Vladivostok flanking
Manchuria on the east, and to Port
Arthur, at the tip of the province
Jutting down into the Yellow sea.
Provision Cited
Tlie treaty alliance between Rus-
sia and China provides that Port
Arthur, stronghold dominating
south-central Manchuria, w’ould be
garrisoned by Soviet forces.
The scope of the reported Soviet
withdrawal from Manchuria still
was obscure. But informed refer-
ences to a pullout of the main Sov-
iet units in a concerted, three-way
action suggested that the Red
army command had decided on a
full scale exit without waiting for
the Chinese to resolve their own
differences.
Gravity Reflected
The gravity of the civil war and
an indication of thin hope for
early settlement were reflected in
an appeal to Chungking by Gen-
eralissimo Chian? Kai-shek's forces
In inner Mongolia for reinforce-
ments.
All ofifeial Central news ugencj
dispatch said the Communists were
pressing a wide offensive that line’
brought under siege the key cities
of Patow and Kweteui.-
\'J7i
r
V
v,<
£
>>7\
Pictured above are members of El Reno’s undefeated junior
highschool football team, composed principally of highschool fresh-
men, who will oppose the Chickasha junior team at 7:30 p. m.
tonight on the Legion park gridiron. All receipts derived fron\ to-
night’s game will be donated to Canadian county’s United War
Fund In the first row, left to light, are Bobby Curtis, Bobby
Phelps. John Hudman, Jerry Hutson, John Erbar, Ray Littlejohn,
Harold Kessler and Carol Hardwick. Second row: Robert Thiel,
Philip Thomas. Bill Lechtenberger, Dean Rinehart, J. D. Bllyeu,
Donald Whittle, Virgil Wakefield. Weld Prevratil and Charles Wilk-
inson, Third row: Benny Niles, Hubert Sills. Jack Clady, Bob Am-
stutz, Gene Scars, L. D. Bishop. Dale Craw’ford. Bennie Anderson,
Ray Ivey and Othal Petre, coach. Fourth row: Bobby Ross, Jimmie
Kintz, Jack Dyer, Gerald Stockton, Arnold Goucher, Dean Kullmann,
Tom Peabody. Vem Wllkerson and Welbournc Fire, other mem-
bers of the squad not in the pitcure are Glenn Baker, Jack Runnells
Eugene Prince and Bill White. Thus far the El Ren# juniors have
played lour games, defeating Putnam City twice, 53-0 and 21-0,
trimming Guthrie Juniors 32-7 and dumping Chickasha Juniors 19-7.
Tonight’s benefit match with the Chickasha squad is a return en-
gagement between the two teams.
46 States Agree Red Coats Arrive In
On Thanksgiving Southeastern Oklahoma
Arkansas, Tennessee
Are Holding Out
| BROKEN BOW, Nov. 13 —(U.PJ—
i The Red Coats are not coming, they
| are already here. And it looks like
i a bad time for southeastern Okla-
WASHINGTON, Nov. 13—(U.R)— lioma deer during the next five
Tlie double, or divided. Thanks- days.
jiving apparently is almost a thing Thousands of hunters shouldered
)f tlie past. their old trusties yesterday and in-
Only two states, Arkansas and vaded tlie hill country of seven
Tennessee, will celebrate turkey, -southeastern counties in the annual
Powerful communist forces werr j Jay this year on Nov. 29. the fifth pursuit of the elusive quarry,
up their siegr j Thursday of the month.
reported stepping
of Kweisul, capital of fcuiyuan pro-
vince, In an attempt to overwhclir
the ancient city which had beer
under assault from all sides foi
more than a week.
|i‘r “ “re"u" l
■More than half the city was in
Yiti. h hands, fin<i late advices said
li y held a line tills morning ex-
Indiiig roughly from the hotel
lerabaja and the telegraph office
the Grand hotel.
JRAF planes circled overhead
|rougliout the day. strafing nests
resistance and dive bombing na-
Jmalist road blocks in the path of
Indian infantry.
Adequate Food
Supplies Seen
More Meat, Fats And
Sutrar in Prospect
WASHINGTON. Nov. 13 —(U.R)—
Plentiful food supplies in 1946 will
give U. S. civilians an average daily
diet of 3.500 calories compared with
Snelling’s father. J. A. Snelling. i lA0° to 2-40° calories tha‘ '"“St
who was 95 years of age, was hos- , ^Ulu*3cans arp Bering in the first
pitalized for treatment of second ! P°st"w’ar >ear
.
The other 46 states and the; 10,000 would participate in the hunt.
District ol Columbia will have before it ends Friday,
heir Thanksgiving on Nov. 22, the 1 While hundreds of hunters came
ourth Thursday, as provided by back empty handed last night, a
let of congress. ;----
Last year six states observed j
the fifth Thursday and two other's |
ibscrved both.
President Truman, in his first i
Thanksgiving proclamation, yes- [
erday proclaimed the fourth
Thursday as a day on which Ant- t
jricans should give humble thanks,
that they are free men and should
seek to preserve their devotion l
to the freedoms and rights of i
mankind that peace might endure.
Reparations Bill
To Be Computed
Pauley Is in Tokyo
To Size Up Situation
TOKYO, Nov. 13—I/P)—President
warning to hunters to get their kills Truman’s reparations representa-
dressed and in ice houses as quickly rive, Edwin S. Pauley. reached
as possible. This warm weather and Tokyo tonight and announced “I
Iresh meat don’t go well together— want a couple ol days to size up
lor long. 'he situation before making any
Rangers throughout tlie seven definite statements" about the re-
Game rangers estimated at least counties were cautioning all hunters Paratlons bill which defeated Japan
to wear red. and perhaps white and wlu be asked to pay.
blue, too—"and for heaven’s sake j “I expect to have things well
be sure It’s a deer — not another in hand before I leave," he added,
hunter—before you start shooting." but he gave no indication how
----------j long he expects to remain. He
good many encountered success j
their first trip out and were ready
to head for home and some choice
eating.
But Ranger Clay Boyd issued a
Demolition Of
Plants Started
60 Buildings Are
Destroyed by Blasts
Price Hike On
Cars Opposed
Bowles Denounces
‘Pressure Tactics’
arrived in a private plane with
Navy Undersecretary Artemus L.
Gates.
Seventeen members of the repar-
ations commission began prelimi-
nary discussions with officers of
General Douglas MacArthur’s staff
Foundations Of
Peace Stated By
Prime Minister
Attlee Is Heard By
Joint Session Of
Congress Today
WASHINGTON. Nov. 13—</p>_
Prime Minister Clement Attlee told
congress today that the foundations
of peace must be "world prosper-
ity and good neighborliness.’’ There
is "no reason," he said, for eco-
nomic rivalry between Great Brit-
ain and the United States.
Speaking in the house of repre-
sentatives to senators and congress-
men who must approve any U. S.
financial aid for Britain, Attlee
frankly sought to remove what he
called "some apprehensions" about
his Labor party’s program.
Tlie prime minister said he be-
lteved "some peoplr over here"
imagined that the British Labor
party was "out to destroy freedom,
freedom of the individual, free-
dom of speech, freedom of relig-
ion and freedom of the press.”
"They are wrong,” he asserted,
adding that the Labor party was
"in the tradition” of all British
freedom-loving movements and "In
line” with “those who fought for
the magna charta. and habeas
corpus, with the Pilgrim fathers
and with the signatories of the
Declaration of Independence.”
Philosophy Explained
A British spokesman said the
speech was a suitable opportunity
for Attlee to explain to the entire
American people the philosophy of
his Labor government with re-
gard to government ownership of
such things as railroads and mines,
lion and steel Industries and the
Bank of England.
Meantime. British, Canadian and
American advisory experts were
meeting separately to put on paper
suggested versions of the atomic
bomb control policy which will be
issued in a three-power commun-
ique.
Tlie Trumun-Attlee conference
was reported to have reached gen-
eral agreement on steps toward
international control of the atomic
bomb. An announcement is pos-
sible by the week-end.
This information was obtained
from diplomatic officials who de-
clined identification. They re-
ported that President Truman and
Prime Ministers Attlee and W. L.
MacKenzie King have been In sub-
stantial agreement since their Sun-
day afternoon talk, and the task
at tlie moment is one of working
for a communique on which all
can agree.
Conference Nears End
Tentatively, the conference may
KAUFBEUREN. Nov. 13 —gP)— j WASHINGTON. Nov. 13
here Nov. 9, and Pauley's arrival
signalled tlie start of official de- 1 bp wound up Thursday night and
liberations I the communique issued Friday.
Another crushing reminder of the I nAttlee ho!,ed tbal policy fin-
. cost of war was brought home a*rppd upon would improve
Tlie president did not specifically wrecking of Germany’s munitions Bitterly denouncing "government Jai)anp*p * forecasts of taxes five'*0'"* re,*Uon# with the three na-
lesignate Thanksgiving as a legal , by pressure,” Pricc Administrator tllllps »“*“«• than current levles-
holiday. but Uie Joint resolution • Uilr> wai> slalted ^ al“ed demo Clleslcr Bowles t<jW todav despite a halved budget.
lassed by
Both
points were contained in a rec-
md third degree burns. He died Tlie agriculture department said
the following May li.
Negligence Alleged
Each of the three petitions for
Jamages charges the gas company j ,
with negligence. The petitions re- '
ate that a valve which had been j However, it added. 1946 wul sec
Installed on Sunset drive connected Bigh Income groups earing better
the gas line to a smaller line ex-
tending Into the home where the
3nelUng family resided.
lose Came Won
By Sacred Heart
Jsacred Heart Red birds basketball | would rest' 11 is
defeated the Okarclie lilgli-
Jiool team by a narrow margin of
-15 when they met Monday night
the El Reno higliscliool gymnas-
congress in December ! lition squads today with a series of ... . . ,
1.. , he Is rejecting demands of auto-
941 specifies that it shall hence-, thunderous blasts which destroyed mobile dealers for higher retail ommendaHon given the finance
forth be a legal public holiday 0ne of the biggest anti newest powd- prices on new cars ministry by the semi-official post-
"to all Intents and purposes. i war currency council
tod ti tt, a , . , The resolution, naming the fourth'er plants ln ^ vaat L O. Farben | He said government by lobby __.____!_
American diet next | Thursdayi was passed aftev several | Mly/otk. pressure Is an ominous sign of
i ar,aa= e Jel PI 1118111 years of confusion over what the “This begins the destruction ol 01,1 nles'
1945—0,1 tlle average—because latc Prcsident Franklin D. Roose- Germany’s war potential," declared Ap|learillt’ btlol'c riie house small
velt admitted was an experiment Lieutenant General Lucian K Tru- business committee, tlie OPA chief
that failed. In 1939. he advanced | estimated members of congress have
the date of Thanskgiving, by presi- sco tf cominander of the U. S. third received more than 5.000 telegrams
as he
Soil Conservation
Lectures Given
Ed Roberts, extension soil conser-
tlian in 1945 while diets of low in-
come families will be "materially
affected" by cuts in their purchas-
The company failed to construct j !n® P°wei- During the war. ration-
a solid base upon which the valve ng and big puv cbec*ts tended to
alleged in the
petitions, which add that the lower
part of the valve was placed in
loose earth where it became dis-
lodged. causing a leak at the base
of the valve. Gas was caused to
j . . , flow along the line and into the
Snelling home.
The valve. It is stated, was plac-
ed in the street, on the shoulder
adjacent to Sunset drive, where
vehicles could be operated over it.
for tlie Redblrds with 5 points,
liile his Ic.unmalcs. Clarence Dill
Jd Carl Elnicuiiurst, cadi scored
points.
Doacli Henry Smimciis announced
lal tlie next contest for tlie Red-
Ids will be with Minco highschool
* 8 p. m. Nov. 19.
Jack Kivefle Visiting
^ifh El Reno Friends
Private Jack Ktvotle of Topeka,
formerly of El Reno, arrived
Ire Sunday for a few days visit
|th friends More reporting at
Bowie. Tex., oil Nov. 15 to
eivc his dis barge from the army.
Clvette has served in the army
J months, having spent 27 months
lerseas before returning to the
liitod Stales In September. He
md in All-ici, Italy, France and
listrin Mueli ol his service over-
|ts was with the allied Iiead-
(arters. but later he was transfer-
to the firth army transporta-
Bciyette is the son of the late
and Mrs. A. Jack Kivette of
Reno.
Sergeant Austin Johnson
Discharged from Service
Staff Sergeant Austin Johnson
received his discharge from the
army Nov. 7 at Fort Benning, Ga..
arriving in El Reno Saturday. He
served with the paratroopers and
was ln the army three years, go-
ing overseas ln January 1944.
He was a prisoner of war of
the Germans eight months, re-
turning to the United States last
April.
Sergeant and Mrs. Johnson are
visiting the former's parents. Mr.
and Mrs. Austin Johnson, 320
North Evans avenue.
spread food supplies evenly among
tlie population.
Even thougli the overall food
supply next year probably will be
the largest in U. S. history, the de-
partment predicted there still would
not be enough pork, choice cuts of
beef and veal, fats and oils, butter,
sugar and canned fish to meet de-
mand.
Military purchases, which took
about 15 percent of the food supply
this year, will drop 60 to 75 percent,
tlie department reported. As a re-
sult, civilian food consumption may
well soar over tlie record establish-
ed in 1944. which was
. , . .. vationist from Oklahoma A. and
lential proclamation to the third i army, as he pushed the plunger protesting OPA s auto price plans. M con,.g(. Stillwater is in Cana-
Thursday in November to lengthen setting off the first of 14 explosions Bowles described this as "the dian county today hiicI tomorrow to
the shopping days between Thanks- which sent 60 buildings hurtling greatest single pressure group op- give illustrated lectures on soil
giving find Christmas so retailers. hundreds of feet into the air, eration since OPA was established.” conservation, it was announced to-
w-ould not be quite so rushed.
Women’s Club Is
i Tlie plant, which extended over Bowles told the committee, in the day by Riley Tarver, county agent.
; an area of two square miles, was presence 01 hundreds of auto deal- "Visual aid" material consisting of
so cleverly camouflaged and so com- ers gathered in the house caucus slides and pictures will show the
pletely masked by the surrounding roon)’ l*iat under the OPA price development of soil conservation
I evergreen forest that not a single -scllcdules for new automobiles the v,ork.
e« m 1944. which was 11 percent I u ... , , „ ,, ,
above the pre-war level by MLsi Lucile Self- ipeoch Bistruc-
_ „ , , _ tor. Upholding the affirmative will
Exports to Europe and the United be Ella Lu Bywater and Hugh Haw-
Business and Professional Women’s urj tilling tic war.
club which will meet at 7:30 p. in. f Only those buildings suitable for1
tonight in the homemaking depart- nothing but arms manufacture were
ment of the El Reno highschool will destroyed. Much usable equipment
be a debate on the question. "Re- was salvaged from the plant, w'hich
solved: That every able-bodied male j Wus valued at *45,000.000.
citizen of the Untied States should |
have one year of full-time military |
training before attaining age 24.’’
Members of the debate class in
El Reno highschool arc presenting
this debate and have been coached
Hearings Set On
Military Training
i,
Kingdom will "continue large." par-
ticularly for the first few months
of the year. These will include
1.500.000.000 pounds of meat.
Loot Recovered With
Arrest of Boy, 11
NORMAN. Nov. 13—U.R)— Police
said today that a
kins, while Bob Fowler and Mike
Musgrove will argue the negative
side of the question. Neoia Maxine
Shultz, another debate student, will
serve as chairman for the debate.
Miss Shultz, a junior B and P. W.
| flub member, arranged for the de-
| bate program.
*
Bowling Alley Operator
Is Assessed Fine Today
SCHOOL PROGRAM SET
Sunnyside school, six miles north
and three miles east of El Reno,
will hare a program, box supper
and cake W’alk at 8 p. m. Thursday
evening, it has been announced by
Miss HUtja Nice, teacher.
had confessed the *454 armed rob- Ldward G. Kelly Is
berv of a Norman cafe yesterday, j Discharged from Navy
They said the youth was arrested I FrtwarH n k-oik.
“**2 ■»»»'’ * — S “triSK
a ht, 2 0 rC,XjrUti l "0m the llavy at tllp Shoemaker,
covered W8S ,e‘ Calif ” naval ppl^llllpl separation
a center.
They quoted tlie boy as saying he He is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
paid that amount to a taxi driver John P. Kelly, 107 North Hoff
to take him to Noble. tsreet.
Meeting; Tonight
Pro,,™ for Uw mo,,,™ ,1. T“ “ U" K-
| schools, and another will be con-
ducted at 8 p. m. tonight at the
Czech hall, near Yukon. Wednes-
(day there will be a meeting at 10
^ a. m. at the Union City liigh-
WAFHINGTON, Nov. 13 —— j school, at 2 p. in. at Calumet hlgh-
jThe house military committee to- 'school, and at 8 p. m. at the
I day rejected by a 15 to 12 vote a Booster 4-H club meet ing at High-
move to defer consideration of land school.
| universal military training legisla- The meetings are open to the
E. P. Dill, charged with permit- Ilton Unt11 next yea1' public, but Tarver particularly urges
ting a minor under the age of 16' 11 aKreed 10 resume hearings on 4-H club and P. F. A. members,
years to woik in a bowling alley "’1' plan 't-quested Oct. 22 by their fathers and friends to attend
after 6 p. in., pleaded guilty when IPresident Trum;‘n. Tlie witness | at least one of these meetings.
he appeared before Felix K. West -,lwt dav wdl be General of the j----
in justice of peace court today, atj^rmy Gwight D. Eisenhower,
which time he was assessed a fine i the committee voted in closed
of $10 and court costs. session. Ciiuinuan Andrew J. May
Information filed In the case last' Democrat, Kentucky > announced
May 28 by Virgil Shaw, Canadian i ,be result but declined to say how
county attorney, charged that on j * lie individual members stood,
last May 27 Dill permitted Barney |--
Fine Is Ordered For
Disturbing Peace
Aivie Roach. 30 of 306 West
Hayes street, charged with dis-
urbing tlie peace in the 2C0 block
of Sunset drive Monday afternoon,
was found guilty hi municipal
court today and was assessed a
fine of $11, according o records of
Lee Harvey, chief of police. Com-
plaint against Roach was signed I clear,
by Elmer Melton. I Rainfall: Truce
Pricc. a minor under the age ol j
16. to work at a bowling alley in |
the 100 block of South Choctaw-
avenue after 6 p. m.
Weather
DrGAULLE IS ELECTED
PARIS. Nov. 13—-/Pi—General
Charles DeGaulle, France's war-
time leader, was elected Interim
president of the French govern-
ment by the constituent assembly
today to direct the creation of the
fourh republic.
Stale Forecast
Fair tonight; little change in tem-
perature tonight, low near 35 pan-
handle to middle 40s southeast por-
tion. Wednesday increasing cloudi-
ness with light rain likely In east
portion by afternoon or night; some-
what wanner.
El Kcuo Weather
For a 24-hour period ending at
8:30 a. m. today: High, 70; low, 38;
at 8:30 a. m.. 41.
State of weather: Unsettled to
obviously had the same hope, but
the White House shed no light
whatever oil American participa-
tion in the Anglo-American-Cana-
dian discussions.
From authentic sources came
word that the conferences on what
| to do with modern history’s hot-
test potato, the atomic bomb, had
j been "very fruitful.”
j British sources said Attlee was
"very happy” about the progress
made. The White House said
nothing except that the president
was "honor bound" to Attlee and
MacKenzie King, the Canadian
prime minister, to say nothing un-
til all three issued their joint
communique.
Ilosenman Plans
To Retire Soon
WASHINGTON. Nov. 13 —1/P)—
Judge Samuel I. Roseiiman will re-
tire at tlie end of the year as spe-
cial counsel to the president, the
White House announced today.
Presidential Secretary William
D. Hassett made the announcement
at a news conference at which he
said Roscninan had served both
President Truman and Former
President Franklin D. Roosevelt at
a “tremendous peisonal sacrifice.’’
Roseiiman, who left a $25.000-a-
year post on the New York State
supreme court, lias been eager to
retire for some months, Hassett
said.
Automobile Collides
With Barked Vehicle
A 1932 model sedan driven east
on Wude street by E. B. Godfrey,
810 South Williams avenue, col-
lided with a 1940 model sedan
owned by W. F. Rogers, which was
parked in the 100 block of Blast
Wade street, at 5:30 p. m. Monday,
according to a report filed with
Lee Harvey, chief of police.
Damage to the left side of Rog-
ers’ car was estimated at *30.
Damage to the Godfrey automo-
bile was not estimated.
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Dyer, Ray J. The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 54, No. 216, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 13, 1945, newspaper, November 13, 1945; El Reno, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc923785/m1/1/: accessed April 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.