The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 53, No. 283, Ed. 1 Sunday, January 28, 1945 Page: 4 of 6
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Four
'
El K«no, (Okla.) Dully Tribune
*N
The El Reno Daily Tribune Inside
The Axis
A Blw UbkM Hnweew hnta| i
Sued dally except Saturday from 907 South Rock Island avenuel
IV) entered •• aecond-clasa mall matter under the act of March 3, 1879.
BUDGE HARLE
New* Editor
BAY J.
Editor an*
DRAM WABB
fhe ASSOCIATED PRESS I* exclusively entitled to the use of re*
publication af all the newi dtopatchee credited to it or not credited by
Mile paper, and alao to aB the loeal new* therein.
All rlphta at publication* at ipectal dispatches herein alao are reserved.
'Could I Interest You In i Nice Line of TemkstenesT'
Sunday, January 28,1
Presenting Paela
by the Fortin Servian
Division ef the OfftM af
War Informal ion
m
^Lway our
TPEOPLE LIYE1
V l
BOCTBRRN NEWSPAPER
PURL IN HER > A 8871.
OKLAHOMA PRESS
ASSOCIATION
DAILY SUBSCRIPTION BATES BY MAIL IN CANADIAN AND
BY CARRIER ADJOINING COUNITES
Okie Week...___________I .30 Three Month*-----------$1.50
three Month*_______________83.25 On Mentha---------------53 00
One Year________________18.00 One Year--------------35 00
Including Sales Tax
Sunday, Jaaaary 31. 1046
A8HINOTON. Jan. 37 — (Spe-
cial' Premier General Kunis-
kl Koiso. the Kwantung army man
to whom waa assigned the Job last
July of harmonising Japan's va-
rious blocs, asked the diet for "can-
I fidence" this week In the midst of
n crisis threatening the existence
of his compromise cabinet and
promislnK to make tpe nation's pol-
itical structure even more uuthnrl-
torlon.
Military defeats, bombings and
economic difficulties are threaten-
ing Koiso Just as they threatened
v\
r:
/a
! mid toppled General Hldekl Tojo j
Seir-respect
fruit. We
that we amount to something, that we bear lost July.
what kind: The fruit of the Spirit Is love. Joy. | Tnjo's cabinet was dominated nl- |
peace, long-aufferlng. gentleness. goodness, folth, meekness, temper- t mosl entirely by the ormy. Wlien
ance-Gal. 5:32-33.
Tojo fell, n eoalltlon government
Manpower in the Kitchen
All we noticed whs
II7E never did see how it came out
" a little item sayinjf that a regional war manpower
commission had questioned a new ruling from Washington
SSWlt.YSiR - - ,«.**.
us with dreA
whs established In which the Army
retained top control, but gave a
greater voice to the navy. Industrial-
ists and bureaucrats on a "united
front” basis. Now. with the same
iH-ublems unsolved. Tokyo broad- ■
c lists Indicate developing pressure j
within the totalitarian political I
I cycle by a return to more dictator- I
I ial ride under new trappings. {
The ruling is obviously a bachelor’s work. No mill'- j Accordini! to the Tokyo domestic j
pied man or woman would think of making it. ‘fit* I radio, inner circles of thp imperial i
danger isn’t in the obvious fact that dishwashers would Rule Assistance Political society
scarcely be essential if the non-essential chef didn't show iirapsi are demanding "a second j
tin to prepare the groundwork for their important labors, comradeship" to carry out a -atrong j
Nor is it so much in the possible effect on the restaurant J»««>«*» ndm'nfcrtrotlon" under
business. No, the danger is in the ruling's impust on H "ew
the well-ordered American home.
A lot of husbands wash dishes these days. So do a
lot of sons and daughters. Some always have. Others
began when housemaids swarmed out of America’s kitchens ytni.tke the Nazi party
like so many lemmings and scampered to war jobs. ^ many. Janan'H present
But whether these huslumds and youngsters arrived at
the sink through necessity, kindliness or coercion, they
created what at best is a delicately balanced situation.
Their breakage rate is rather high. Some washers are
of the slap-dash school; others are thorough and mad-
deningly slow. In either case they seldom do the job
with Mother’s effortless efficiency.
* # *
r ■ •
The context of
Tokyo's reportage suggested a drive
for the Naziflcatlou of Japan's to-
tnllliirlim political structure.
* * *
In Ger-
many. Japan's present totalitar-
ian party—the Imperial Rule Assist-
ance association iIRAAl—is n mass
organization, encompassing the en-
tire iinlion rather titan an elite
group. With a top bureaucracy op-
erating through such subsidiary sec-
tions ns the IRAA youth corps and
the IRAA Greater East Asia head-
quarters. the purpose of the organ-
ization Is to explain the will of the
government to the people and mo-
bilize them behind that will.
THJT Mother doesn't complain. She is grateful for the
** help, whatever Hu quality. The kitchen police in turn
SraSJSTiBS rs £?£ tr
movie dates and father has often had his favorie radio
program drowned out by the slosh of water and clatter of
dishes.
The kitchen |x>lice have seen Mother choke off a hasty,
impatient word, and have reuliaed that their washing and
drying technique left something to be desired. They have
known that her forbearance was possible only because of
her ..sincere gratitude. And thus, through the reciprocal,
precarious emotionals balance, a great many incipient
kitchen revolts have died u-borning.
But we shudder to think of what might happen if that
WMC order ever gained currency. The home dishwashers
could scarcely resist preening themselves n little and put-
ting on a few airs. This would surely upset Mother, the
non-essential chef or cook, und goad her into action.
* * #
rpHE more temperamental housewives would probably go
on a culinary strike. The milder and cannier ones
would insist that since housekeeping was their business,
they would have to insist that they take over the essential
kitchen job and leave the minor matter of cooking to I)nd
and the kids.
There is no need to speculate upon the dire results.
They are only test predictable—ruined tempers, ruined di-
gestions, complete domestic chaos. So we beseech you, —— —.....—
WMC, eat your words before the nation has to quit eating J” ruiber-stamp government legis-
entirelv 'lotion All members of the house
j of representatives are Ipso facto
members of the IRAPS. with a cen-
tral steering group serving ns whips.
hood associations." groups of fam-
ilies organized on the basis of ad-
Jaeent dwellings. Sale of war bonds,
administration of the air raid war-
den system and numerous "cam-
paigns" and "drives" ore mani-
pulated through these associations.
The iraa was established by
Premier Prince Fumtmaro Konoye
under army prodc'tng, when politi-
cal parties-as we understand them
—were dissolved.
As organized by Konoye. the IRAA
bridged the gap between the govern-
ment nnd the people, but left open
the gap between the government and
the people's representatives in the
diet. In May. 1942 General Tojo,
who succeeded Konoye. took n step
to fill the void by establishing a
parliamentary wing of the IRAA—
the Imperial Rule Assistance Politi-
cal society i IRAPS>.
Thu*, while the job of the IRAA
is to mobilize the people behind the
government, the job of the IRAPS
Is to mobilize the diet behind the
government and arrange for the diet
War plant workers can never be sure that a strike
will get a raise in pay—but they can be, that it will bring
a raise in public indignation.
It’s just a question of time until there’ll be a total
eclipse of the Rising Sun.
Look and Learn
A lot of people forget that they were taught, when
babies, to stand up for themselves.
Down Memory Lane
Jan. 28, 19335
Mrs. Clara ('lore, 415 North Bickford avenue, has
been elected to the position of alternate of the western
division of the Southwestern Bell Telephone association.
Mrs. Clore received the honor during a convention of the
district in Oklahoma City during the latter part of last
week. She was accompanied by Mrs. Viola Gappa, 315
North Bickford avenue, an out-going vice chairman.
1 What is atavism?
2. Of what great fiction char-
acter is Alexander Selkirk a
counterpart?
3. What Is the principal reason
i for nomads moving from place to
' place?
4 Who are "Muzhiks"?
5 What Is the "Land of Milk
and Honey?” .
answers
1. The presence in an Individual
of ehnracteristtcs absent in Its
Immediate ancestors, but present
In more remote ones.
2. Robinson Crusoe.
3. To find food for their flocks.
4. Russian peasants.
5. Palestine.
Miss Marian Dale, 501 South Ruck Island avenue,
assumed duties as an employe with the Agricultural Ad-
justment administration at the state headquarters in Still-
water. Miss Dale is a comptometer operator.
Mr. and Mrs. M. V. Johnson, Mrs. Jack Johnson, son,
Donald, and Frank Reiser, of Cromwell, were guests over
the week-end of Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Johnson, 1201 East
Oak street, M. V. Johnson is u brother of P. R. Johnson.
Bill Woodard, of Bethany, spent the week-end in
Reno, the guests of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. G.
Stone, 628 South Miles avenue.
Miss Clara Bonebrake, an instructor in the Oklahoma
College for Women, Chickasha, spent the week-end in
the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Bonebrake,
120ft East Oak street.
Miss Maxine Fowler spent the week-end with her par-
ents in Carnegie, accompanied by Frank and Lina Hukill.
Bill Bonebrake, 1290 East Oak street, spent the week-
end with friends at the Delta Tau Delta fraternity houae
hjjfacman
Problem a Day
*8
Behind the Scenes
In Washington
by peter edson
NEA Washington Correspondent
WASHINGTON, D. C.—You might us well know the full story
™ on the 1000 Club puyoff, nnd how its 291 members bowed them-
selves out of the political picture in a big blowout at Washington’s
new Stntler hotel, marking the wt^lup of the Fourth term inaugura-
tion lack-of-cerfBtonles.
Approximately 27S out of the 291 paid up mem-
bers of the 1000 Club came to Washington for the
inauguration, end though they had collected only
ubout a third of the million dollars the club foun-
ders had hoped to get, they found they still had
some $3400 in the treasury.
When party leaders suggested the money be
turned into the Democratic National Committee to
keep the party machine running till 1948, the club
lenders sold nothing doing. They hud been told
that they were going to throw a lot of weight
around, nnd by golly they were going to make a
M*an splurge If they had to pay for it themselves. So
the 291 member 1000 Club decided to give themselves a banquet.
Hollywood
Film Shop
By Hazel Hartzog
United Press Correspondent
CHICAGO—TRE YOUNG GIANT | the two branches of the Y. To
in u he strolled along the st
When Jeff Martin stepped out of the community seemed to be ■
the murky and smoke-blackened glomerate mixture of shantlei
train shed Into Chicago's bright sun- 1 flee buildings, marble resld
light he looked like a coal-heaver low and filthy dram shops am
who had neglected to wash up at gent store*,
the end of the day * work. Hl* face The people he passed follows
and i. tnds were streaked with smoke same pattern. Sedata-looklng
and dust; his high-standing linen tlemen In high allk hats and pi
collar was wrinkled and smutty and ly equipped with gloves and
his light-brown milt was disheveled, were elbowed by toughs and
He had been two nights on the road. Arabs. Foreigners, with st
but he had not gone to bed at all. speech on their tongues, went
for he distrusted the newfangled , and forth,
sleeping car attached to the train. Along the lake front on the 1
He carried—and this was a deep Side were the houses of
secret—the sum of $3000 In a mon-, wealthy families,
ey belt around hi* waist. This was Some of the costly, pretei
on unexpected inheritance from a lake front residences were arcl
rheumatic ajid querulous old maid tural monstrosities cluttered
cn aunt to whom he had been kind turrets, domes, bay windows,
and attentive. nice* and porte-cocheres.
He had reached the age of 32 dictionary of the architects wh
and was vividly conscious that Ids aimed these structures. The;
life was n failure. He had tried deavored to fill every blank
hard, but for one reason or another, with some ornamental device
hnd never made a success of any- would disfigure the facade o
thing. Now he hoped to make a houses,
new start In the fast-growing, vlg- * * *
orous town that was on everybody's The Henderson home, when
tongue. was attending a party the
* * * of the fire, was similar In c
Jeff was sadly disappointed In to these palatial lake front t
the nppeurnnee of Chicago, or of as in*Is but built on a smaller seal
much of It as he cpuld see from the wns ot reddish brick and con
hack that he took to the Briggs of two stories nnd an attic. A
House from the stu"cn. The city sl<le n wtf,p driveway led up
blocks were n hodge-podge of wood- porte-cochere. Thp porch In
en and brick buildings, huddled to- was so wide and its celling si
gether without harmony or design, that It kept the rooms on the
Most of the wooden houses were lloor ln dusk even whe
unpainted, and they had the sod- sun shone brightly. The
den appearance that comes from1 weather vane on the ridge o
long exposure to the weather. Some roof- shaped like a flying |
of them leaned crazily to one side, creaked noisily with every
or over the street, and looked ns If shift of the wind The porte-co
a little push would knock them WB* n,urh to° b,B «'>d stately
down 1 house of such moderate size b
Modern stores with handsome Jeff. Mnrt,n lt fl" SP<,mwl ven
show windows stood next door to Rnnt
disreputable-looking barrooms A He thought II wns Just the kl
wind was blowing and the air was hiiose he would build for hints
full of dust and whirling scraps tie ever had the means.
(To Re Continued)
of paper. The streets and sidewalks
J were littered nnd dirty.
ITOt.LYWOOD, Jan. 27— (U.R)—All I It was Sunday morning and
! “ Is not roses In this business of i church bells were ringing. About
! making movies. Just ask Clalri- Tie-1 a block from the Brlf gs House there
| vor. | was a large and handsome church.1
built of wood and painted gray.
London's Old Vk Casl
To Tour Allied Fronts
LONDON Jan. 27 —(U.R)—
the services. Nearly all the men the marquees of Broadway anc
wore tall silk hats and the long, eadtlly. will get a flrst.nlghter’s
double-breasted frock coats known of some highbrow theater this s
os Prince Alberts. , when a cast of 50 from Lon
In the mntter of hair on the mas- Old Vic company tours the
|>Y actual count, there were 1111 tickets put out. The breast of
guinea hen dinner cost $5 a plate, or $555$, plus $375 for the
Presidential banquet room and $175 for the Congressional banquet
room adjoining. Sum total, $6155.
Mrs. Roosevelt was there and General and Mrs. Marshall. The
new Vice-President was there and on his very first day nnd night in
office got broken in on his long four years of being a distinguished
guest and a maker of brief remarks at banquets.
But the Honorable Justices of (he Supreme Court stayed away en
masse, the Navy was represented by the mere Commandant of the
Coast Gunrd.
gel" were ready for the climax—!
the scene whe™ the blond actress
sees stabbed and dying husband.
Marvin Miller, and emits a blood-
curdling scream.
Everything was fine, except! cullne face there was much dtversl- j tlnent In "Richard III" and
| Claires scream. It just wasn't the ty in fashion but every grown-up : Oynt."
I “horrifying' kind. j male wore either a beard or a. The rompany Is closing its
J "You've got to act scared. You’ve 1 mustache. Jeff Martin hud no beard | don season early to leave or
| got to give—to put some fear In it," | but his mustache stood out, straight ! six-week tour May 28. carrylni
said Director Fd Mnrln. dissatisfied and stiff; he waxed It dally. productions complete with Lc
with nearly a dozen tries. | Leaning over In the hack to get properties. It will play two '
By this time Claire's throat is j a 8<>cd view of the people going in Brussels, one week ln Pari!
| strained from all these shrieks. jto church he noticed that the la- the remaining time at smaller 1
j “It’s no use " she snvs "I'm lust I dles of CI'iraRO tossed exactlv like to be derided later.
‘too happy today to sound fr,it. j‘he ladles of Baltimore. The hoop-! The cast Includes Laurence
ened. cy got “leave “ndIs TlL I1BUrt pra was (iv?r and *«» <***» VPr' hl,sband of Vlvlp" ^*h
way home." i
t>RANK SINATRA was another celebrity who was supposed to be
*■ there but wasn't. Weather—not dogs—kept him from flying in
but it was no loss because the 372nd Infantry glee club sang war
songs and the Star-Spangled Banner much better than Frankie could
ever have done.
with bustles had come Into favor.
.._ i Skirts were long, so long indeed
C.v is Cylos W. Dunsmoore, navy i that their hems collected dust and
lieutenant. Claire's husband, who| refuse from the pavement. All the
Is training carrier-based filers. | ladies wore overdresses ct colored
Miller, his hair matted with sweat,' silk. These outside garments were
clothes disheveled, shirt-front ornamented with embroidered flow-
smeared with studio "blood." makes
a face.
Ralph Richardson.
Heavv Enrolment In
Post-War Days Seen
School Graduates
5,000th Shavetail
NEW ORLEANS, Jail. 27—(U.R)—
The transportation corps school at
the New Orleans army air base
awarded Its 5.000th second lieute-
nant's commission to James j.
Walker, Yonkers, N. Y.
The school was founded In Octo-
ber 1942. at Mississippi State col-
lege. A few months later lt was
moved to Camp Plauche near New
Orleans and last January to Its
present site.
It trains all officer candidates for
the army transportation corps In
addition to many officers assigned
to the corps from other branches of
the army.
Soldier, 18, Already
Has Served Four Years
LOOANSPORT. Ind.. Jan. 27—
(U.R>— Private First Class Bill Col
lins Is only 18 years old. but he
" Trevor und Miller, with star George
I Raft, retire to their dressing rooms,
thought the youngster was Joking and a look of genuine horror comes
when he asked if lt were the Scout into them. For n moment she is
headquarters. The sergeant said lt transfixed, then her mouth opens
was. and out comes a really terror-laden
BUI had the form half-filled out scream,
before he realized what it was. then | For, behind the blood-covered
decided to Join the army after his Miller, Is a property man holding
NORMAN, Jan. 27 —(Spec!
Post war enrolment at the
ers nnd other decorations. verslty of Oklahoma will double
* * * of pre-war days, mainly be
"Look at me." he challenges, “don'tspent his first few days ln ; educational careers of thousan
I frighten you?" I Chicago going about the city. Stu-; young persons were . interrupt*
1 Claire shook her head. Director '£,vlnr a ,lttle map' he learned ‘hat, the call to colors, it is believe
Marin called a recess and while Miss 1 lhe ChlcaRO rlver ran stial6ht east ] Dr. George L. Cross, president.
Into Lake Michigan, and that about "
a mile and a quarter inland it was
formed by two forks—one coming
frem the northwest and the other
from the southwest—so these water-
ways had a shape somewhat like
that of a capital letter Y, with wlde-
I spreading branches.
The city was divided into three
main divisions—North Side and j guidance progtam. not only fo
South Side, meaning north or south i turning veterans, but for all
of the river, and the West Side, i dents who come to the unlve
which included everything between * he said.
, . . . , , , Marin goes into a huddle with his
already has been In service for four . “ "ls
. , assistant and somp property men
years—because of an error. ''y lll<;n
When Bill was 14. he walked Into
what he thought was a Boy Scout i
office to join the Scouts. The desk jr,wmbl?d
sergeant, an old-time arnty hand, i Slowly Miss Trevor's eyes turn_1
"Let's make lt food this time.
With 81 veterans of the wo
the campus at the end of the
semester, and many others re
ing to the campus as the si
semester started. Cross pn
that several hundred will be
tending O. U. by next fall.
Plans have been set in oper
for a comprehensive testing
parents gave their consent.
Private Breger Abroad
By Dtvs
How much alcohol must, be ad-
ded to 6 gallons of a 3<K; mixture
of alcohol nnd water to make a
50', mixture?
ANSWER
2.4 gallons. Explanation—Multi-
iply 6 by 0.30; subtract thLs result
from the product of 6 and 0.50;
divide by the difference between
1 nnd 0.50.
HE'D BE MOBBED NOW
MARFA ARMY AIR FIELD,
Tex.—(U.R)— When Staff Sergeant
Leonard F. Most was lecturing
for the Dupont company before
the war, he didn’t have much
trouble holding the attention of
his audience. He just held a paint
can ln one hand and a pair of
nylon stockings ln the other. Th3t
accomplished two objeets; it dem-
onstrated the variety of Dupont
products and It also held the at-
tention of both men and women.
a telegram pasted to a sign read
I inS “from the war department."
! The scene over, he hastily ex-
plains that It was Just a “gag."
"You needed something to snap
von out of that daydream. I knew
if you thought Cy's leave hnd been
canceled . . ."
As Claire looked around for
something to throw, everybody
I ducked and Mnrln hastily rushed
i for tlte door, shouting:
i “Take an hour for lunch, every-
, body. Too hot to work now."
Sally’s Sallies
By William Fergl
Lesson in English
■■■4
WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: Do
not say. “The condition of the
company’s affairs were satlsfac-j
tory." Say. “was satisfactory."
Condition Is the singular subject,
i OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED:
Ruse. Pronounce rooz, no as in
moon.
OFTEN MISSPELLED: Monot-
onous; four o's.
SYNONYMS: Habit, custom, us-
age, practice.
| Nwwb Synfttfftt Ini ''
‘Well, if officers don't wear these Sam Browne belta any '
"jnore, J don't see why ua Ole can’t!”
WORD 8TUDY: "Use a word
three times and it ls yours." Let
us Increase our vocabulary by
mastering one word each day. To-
day's word: CONCUR; to coincide.
"The members of the committee
concurred ln the report, of the
chairmen.”
Ki*s fntunt It, World ri|Sn nnr»«*.
“I had a wonderful time at the party last night I feel awful
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Dyer, Ray J. The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 53, No. 283, Ed. 1 Sunday, January 28, 1945, newspaper, January 28, 1945; El Reno, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc923898/m1/4/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.