The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 60, No. 240, Ed. 1 Sunday, December 9, 1951 Page: 4 of 16
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: El Reno Daily Tribune and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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Four
El Reno (Okla.) Daily Tribune
Sunday, December 9, 1951 \
The El Reno Daily Tribune
A Blue Ribbon Newspaper Serving a Bine Blbbon Cem»«lty_
Issued Dally except Saturday from 201
tnd entered as second-class mall matter under th____—
BAT j. dyer
„EAN “d »• «“
HARRY SCHROEDKR
Circulation and Office M»nn*er__
The AssoclatedRpr?s!EifeSutJdHexc1Sv^yUt^Se use for rePUbUcaUon
StffSS^S news printed In this newspaper, as weU as all AP new.
dispatches. ______
—— member
-asSiiT"®-
r:■»*■=•■ “r3s==~i-
9“e « i jo Six Months
One Month-------------""{n M One Year
...$3A0
_-WJ0
>ne Year-------------—-so—Out of State____»U.OO
Elsewhere In State-One year—-
Including Sales Tax____
Sunday, December 9, 1951
________ „i, traries that Is one reason why
Paul was no handy man nor Jack oI 1 . ’ saw RRVC oniy thc
many regard him the greatest man lhat wc become dwarfs,
Son of Man. Wc divide our interest*sc- much tha w« ^ But this one
‘not giants, as Paul was, by doing one thing supnb >
thing I do.—Phil. ;13. _____________—
'We'll Clean Up, Ma'
i.
ASKi
No Job for Supreme Court
THE name of Chief Justice Vinson c™|)» up rep<
Q/n
Mr. Breger
By Dave Breger
yearif the president should decide to retire and wish Vinson
to run on the Democratic ticket as his succt.8 , P
questions will be automatically raised both for the cniei
iU8^r,^rMw. to a =ib1c P-jj«,«i»l
f^^^^h^gh' wurt^to 'lhe^Hi'tica? arena. As some have
nut it he wants a “disrobing room, an interim jo » '
A* « iffS
own or the courts dignity.
J
%
ft
Wm * '
■v-y-.ys.-tt-.
If
IP
ACCORDING to numerous accounts, he was to have ha<
A secretary of State Acheson's job if and when he rewgned.
Rut Acheson plainly has no intention of quitting, and mr.
Truman wfll Sot fire him. And it is now altogether too
late for V inson to take that post without seeming to be
“just passing through.
Thought for Sunday! Oo to
church.
V17ANT to forget your anxieties,
• » aches, pains, and the weather.
This afternoon Clarice Jo Imbo-
den, home town gal, gives her
Junior piano recital in the high-
school auditorium, assisted by
Helen Martin’s sweet singers.
I do not know what a junior
recital Is. I know the difefrence
between a professional and an
amateur. The pro gets money for
his services and the amateur
doesn’t. If Clarice Jo Is a profes-
sional concerteer and this Junior
stuff is a rating I’ll buy that. I’m
not expecting Serge Rachmaninoff
In person, but Clarice Is no ama-
teur performer, Irrespective of
economical transactions, and there
is pleasure to be had listening to
what this gal can get out of a
piano.
A smidgin of satisfaction can
be gained from the giving way of
• sound off” to "White Christmas.”
On every radio program. The song
both words and music arc lovely,
but I'd rather have a green
Christmas.
Am inclined to agree with the
gal from the deep south who,
when chided about the lack of
snow for Christmas, said she
didn’t understand where people
got the idea the Christ was born
in a snowstorm
Ssfc^x
“Waiter, you can take those steaks back—we ate to<»
much bread 'WAITIN’ for them!”
★WASHINGTON COLUMN ★
BY DOUGLAS LARSEN
NEA Staff Correspondent
ig vnrouKii.
There is some speculation Mr. Truman might create some
slant presidency for him. as President Roosevelt
di^ wLn'hHu red’ Jame^F. ‘ By roes’ off the supreme court
Certainly few established jobs in Washington fill the very
special requirements of Vinson’s situation. ....
Aside from his personal dilemma, there is the matter of
what such a move will do to the court. Whatever device
resorted to. the fact will be ill-disguised that the court wi
have been used as a steppingstone to high Pobtjca1 office
Any American, regardless of las calling, should be a
to aspire to the presidency. No bar should exist for < •-
tinguished jurists as such. Nor should the people lie denied
the chance to select a man from any facet of American life.
But there is a real danger in turning to the supreme court
for candidates. It was done in the case of ( harles Evans
Hughes in 1916, and has been talked of many times since.
Yet the court can only suffer in consequence
By Nina Wilcox Putnam
Copyright 1951 by NEA Service, Inc.
Ion. But today, thinking of Tom-
my's surprising Jealousy, she real-
ized for the first time that she bore
a certain intangible resemblance to
Oran' Bijou.
A French temperament and a
A r 1 rum iiHipciamwiiv —---- _ .
New England conscience!" she said | a knight of King Arthurs Court
aloud. "That’s me. and It’s an might have presented a young as-
THE judiciary is a distinct and independent branch of our
A government. The supreme court is its highest manifes-
tation. Service on this tribunal should be viewed as among
the highest duties a man can perform—as indeed it is.
To make it a recruiting bureau for political office—even
for high appointive executive jobs—is to demean its stature.
The court already has been damaged by being treated as i
political Nirvana, the great reward for deserving pohticians
who understandably seek relief from the recurring anguish
of election campaigns. It should not be further harmed
by conversion into a way station on the route to the White
House.
Possibly the die is cast in Vinson’s case. If it is. jurists
and statesmen alike should thenceforth be resolved to keep
the high court apart from the political maelstrom, to turn
to the bench for a candidate only when the country s need
of him is extraordinarily compelling.
Lots of folk leave a movie house right in the middle of a
picture. Sleep walking is quite common._____
Down Memory Lane
Doc. 9. 1»31
Officers elected by the Keystone chapter No. 0 of the
Royal Arch Masons Tuesday night were II. F. Harrison, high
priest; S. R. Reville, king; J. N. Lindsey, scribe; 1. P. Bart-
lett. captain of the host; J. A. Johnson, treasurer, and
C. G. Wattson, secretary. Appointive officers will be named
prior to installation on Dec. 22.
John T. Naylon, active in El Reno civic affairs, the Amer-
ican Legion and the Canadian County Reserve Officers
association, has been promoted to the rank of major in the
U. S. army reserve officers corps, it was announced today
by 95th division headquarters at Oklahoma City.
El Reno Odd Fellows attending the I OOF meeting Tues-
day night at Kingfisher were W. A. Duff, John hike, A. G.
Burger, Fred Corlee, Will Heer, Jim Moorman, E. E. Teague,
Jesse Roberts, Tom Burner. LeRoy Burner, Ralph Turner,
John Perdue. Walter Buss. J. C. Douglas, Fred Gaughorn,
E R. Barnhart, Ellis Harmon, M. M. Golden, Dempsey
Perkins, J. L. Patman, M. V. Stcenrod, Hugh Lanman, Roy
Morris and Harry Goff.
Mr. and Mrs. L. J. Gerber and daughter, Donna Jean,
who have been visiting thc past 10 days in thc home of
his parents, Mr. and Mrs, Pete Gerber, 914 South Barker,
left this morning for their home at Bentonville, Ark.
TIIE STORY: Alma Conroy,
woman Jewelry designer for the
House of Trumbull, an exclusive
establishment, almost believes her
husband Tommy Is a failure when
he Is turned down as "not the cal-
iber" for a promotion In the firm.
But Tommy laufhs and presents
his wife with a corneous silver fox
stole, and says that he has a “big
time Job” which Involves “a lot of
confidential business" with Brighton
Munclr, son of the president of the
firm. Alma begins to believe It.
Only a man making a good Income
could have bought such a gorgeous
gift.
* * *
III
uxORE than once in the past
1*1 Alma had grasped at some
seemingly sturdy performance of I
Tommy’s, only to find that It broke
like a straw when she Rave It
weight. But It was good to have
been happy if only for an hour.
Perhaps that was the only way
happiness came to anyone—in brief
snatches. But the old. long cher-
ished hope of a fine, balanced life
between them did not die In her.
Presently Tommy was lighting a
cigarct looking at her.
"This new Job of mine will lake
me out of town once in a while.”
he wus ; living.
“Out oi town? When will you be
going, To: uny?" Tills was rather
dismaying
'Tomorrow I'll be gone over-
night. Maybe two nights. It may
happen pretty often. Listen, Alma,
we've never bee i separated. I won-
der If you’ll—well, with your tem-
perament . . . you see, I'in Jealous
as the dickens.”
"Jealous of whom, silly?”
"Well, Joe Denton, for one I"
"Joe is your best friend."
‘T’vo been noticing thc way he
looks at you lately. I think he
likes you pretty well. And that
Better-Diamonds section Job he has,
Is sort of glumorous—what with the
formal clothes Thc House makes
hint wear. Regular Duke!"
"But, dearest. Joe and you and
I have been running around to-
gether for years. Joe Is devoted
to you!”
"How do I know?" said Tommy,
stamping out his cigarct viciously
"Maybe I don't know anything—
except that right now I'm hungry
What happened to that dinner we
were going to have?" Alma sprang
up with her usuul devoted obedi-
ence.
•'I'll try and rescue It!" she said
* * *
It be cleanlv and devoid of the i ard. had been a Journeyman-Jeweler
ridiculousness of too current fash- at The House until his sudden death
, _ r_____ >»/... • n mil on A mn WAS
from pneumonia when Alma was
only three years old. Then, six
years ago Papa Victor had brought
her to work and presented her to
the president of Trumbull's In
much the same manner with which
The original use of chimes was
to call the people to prayer. Now
we get "Silent Night,” "Oh, Little
Town of Bethlehem." "It came
Upon a Midnight Clear," and the
"Adeste Fidelis" ground out on
public address systems as a part
of promotion plans to stimulate
buying.
Christmas carols should belong
strictly to carollers and remain
undesecrated. Hope the ' barber-
shoppers" will get around to us
again this year. Christmas will
lack something if they are not
out.
This Is a good day for popcorn,
radio and TV. All good entertain-
ment but thc soap and deodorant
ads are about to get me riled.
One grows weary with grime and
body odor penetrating every pro-
gram. They are too realistic, sez
I. Oh! and don't forget your af-
ternoon nap from dinner to con-
cert time.
Pjanesand Tanks Lie Idle
For Want of Essential Parts
yyASHINGTON, Dec. 8—(NEA)—
At a big aircraft plant "some-
where in U. S. A.." a number of
new planes arc lined up on the
runway. To all outward appear-
they ore completed, ready
oners
Dollarwi.se, the defense program
today is a $100 billidn proposition
—455 billion authorized for this
year. $45 billion authorized for the
first year after the outbreak of
Korean fighting. Deliveries to date
to fly away. But they lack one I are $14 billion. Perhaps that Isn t
complex piece of new radar-flre- much for thc first 15 months’ effort.
control apparatus. ***„,,,
This Is the new electronic bomb- l)UT as one defense official put.-,
sight and computer which makes it: "Suppose we set our goal In
possible accurate bombing from the aircraft at. say 100 planes a month,
new high-level, hlgh-altitude bomb- Any month we made 125. we'd be
crs. It replaces thc old optical ahead of schedule and could brag
bomb-sights of the Norden type about It. But suppose we set our
and the mechanical bomb-sights goal at 150 planes a month. Then
full of gears. Those were top-secret If we made only 125. we'd be be-
in World war II. Now they're out- hind.”
moded. I The parallel is that goals have
Without the new radar gear, the been set high to stimulate produc-
new bombers arc considered In- tlon. The schedule calls for stepping
complete. They are classified as up deliveries from present levels of
undelivered. And defense produc- $1.5 billion worth of military pro-
tion Is said to be running behind. I duction a month to a total of
At a tank arsenal, somewhere | $4 billion a month in the first half
else In U. S. A., there are long | of 1953.
Science Reforms
Tortilla Making
awful combination!"
She picked up the lovely dew
fox stole and drew It around her
tenderly, caressing it with her
check. It was going to be a bit of
triumph to be able to say Tommy
had given it to her or,—and it was
a chilling thought—ought she to
mention that fact Just yet?
Perhaps not. At least she had
better not brag too generally until
the store grapevine had established
Tommy's new, secretly important
position at the House. This inv
pulse to be careful was not an al-
together happy one. And It seemed
a little strange and lonely not to
walk to work with Tommy as she
usually did
The new midtown building which
Trumbull At Company had recently
erected stood gleaming In thc mid-
winter sunshine, and Alma, on the
opposite corner, paused for a mo-
ment to gaze at it with a sort of
obeisance to The House as a symbol
of integrity. This was a quality
which had been bound up in the
family many years
Old Victor Blanchard, her grand-
father, had been at Trumbull's for
60 years. Her father. Jules Blanch-
pirant of his •own blood to the
service of thc Round Table.
•yxR. MUNCIE did not show how
deeply he was touched by the
little ceremony, for emotional dis-
play had no place In his conception
of permissible behavior, and he
had concealed his interest In thc
youngster.
"She Is far too young to be any
good!" Mr. Muncie had declared,
"and we don’t take any apprentices
any more, Mr. Victor."
•Ah! mals non. she Is not an ap-
prentice!" Old Victor's voice had
been gentle but stubborn. "She is
a workman of high skill. I have
trained her myself. As for being
too young, why! I was only 16
when my father first brought me
to Mr. Trumbull at the old lower
Broadway establishment, and I too
was already a skilled Journeyman
Jules, my son, came to us at Union
Square when he had Just 19 years.
I stake my reputation that you will
not regret taking this young
woman."
(To Be Continued)
lines of new model tanks. They also
look ready to go and ready to fight
Why aren't they In Korea? Or
Europe? Or with some new me-
chanized division in training?
The answer given Is that in test-
ing. these- tanks developed a ----
"flutter” at one particular speed, takes" and “a waste of manpower
____________ . Above or below this speed, the and skills" In defense planning.
The request for a formula came operated perfectly. Finding Rleve thought peak production
from the Mexican government, al- caused the flutter, and cor- | should be reachable by mid-1952.
though Mexico Is the supposed home rcctl lt took cng|ncers con;
Nutrition pxnerts oil ,, ”
able time.
* * *
WASHINGTON. Dec. 8 —(U.R>—
Science has found a new way to
make tortillas, one of the oldest
dishes In the world.
The request for a formula came
These are some of the factors
| that defense officials say have to
be taken Into consideration of
j charges that defense production is
behind. For instance. Emil Rievc,
| president of CIO Textile Workers,
recently charged “failures and mls-
Total industrial unemployment In
August was down to a record low
for the year of 830.000. In that same
month. 350,000 workers were in-
volved in strikes, a record high for
thc year. Most of the strikes—all
thc big ones—Involved defense In-
dustries.
of the tortilla. Nutrition experts of
the Armour Research foundation in
Illinois have milled successfully an i always seem to be bottle-
inexpensive, dry and stable tortilla J[ Qf one Und or another. I
flour from which Mexico s unsalt^ I n ^ ^ ^ they werc
unleavened corn flapjacks can be cnsines ,n propeUers> jn the very
made with less trouble. air-frames themselves and the
Millions factories which they could be
tlllas the staff of llfe' ® built. Delays this time arc different. I ..... jn Print kH
to the National Geographic society. I ^ engines. New electronic LGSSOll 111 EligilSn
At any rate, the corn dough caxes deylces lg a lag ^ get latest WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: Do
have been the basic food oi maian cnginecrlng deslgns not say, “Wc have been doing that
civilizations for centuries. officials iv>int to curves which right nlong.” Say. "Wc have been
NeTwoS CyerfoundC Indians show that production now is far doing that regularly (or. pcrslstent-
11C,<be “ cornfields ^eseS^laS Stef af the sUrtof World" war II. OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: Em-
Wri the cliff dwellers in the John D Small, head of the Mu- bryo. Pronounce em-bri-o. e ns in
revealed the cliff water,slled nitlons Board, says. "Total deliver- men. I as in It, o as in no, accent
cavea of the Colorado wa ersne i the |tacal year , ending first syllable.
^ „8 PuebloV- June 30. 1951 are estimated at OFTEN MISSPELLED:
today by descendants of ^eblo In J ^ ^ ^ Qf w|observe the two in's.
billion during the July-September SYNONYMS: Uneasy, uncomfort-
quarter was one-third higher than able, worried, disturbed, disquieted,
the preceding quarter and more WORD STUDY: "Use a word
Dec. 9, 1941
Choral clubs composed of pupils from the four El Reno
elementary schools will sinj? Christmas carols from 1 to 2
p. m. Saturday in thc El Reno business district, immediately
preceding the annual Canadian county Sunday school paj?-
eant, it was announced today.
Twenty members of the Junior Rifle club will be pre-
sented diplomas given by the National Rifle association at
a special meeting at 8 a. m. Wednesday in the Veterans of
Foreign Wars post hall. They are Margaret Clark, Chauncey
Hall, George Lamka, Clyde Purcell, Edward Purcell, Don
Rhodes, Cardis Allen. Kay Bruce, Fay Gardner, Jerry Lam-
bert Bobby Brown, Clarence Forquer, Floyd Flippen, Bobby
Leonard. John Stroffe, Paul Cunningham, Bruce Flippen,
Billy Gene Gustafson. David Maxfield and Jack Riley.
Canadian county chapter of the American Red Cross
today was called upon to raise $5,900 of a $50,000,000
nationwide quota for immediate war emergency use by the
American Red Cross.
rpHE next morning Tommy left
r Marine Aquatic
Answer to Prmriom Punle
_________ Dilemma;
_ I .... - , .. « . 0 I nWjtjkaiiiM S K« mmm * mm
dlans of the United States. It Is
used also by heirs of Aztecs and
Mayas In Mexico.
1,1 ^^^pn'w^men'stUl'Wind*”the I then 'four times’the rate of pro-1 three times and It Is yours
down-trodden women still B™10 ---------------- „„„ Us increase on
HORIZONTAL
1,4 Depicted
animal
RFlowen
10 Play the part
.. m h0ft__ k- mistakee
“TW ueed by eAn (Scot )
golf ere 7 openwork
VERTICAL
1 Golfer’s term
2 Pronoun
3 Pause
4 Pace
5 Makes
mistakes
early. Alma, still glowing from
thc happiness of the evening be-
fore. breakfasted and set thc apart-
ment to rights quickly and effi-
ciently. Then she pulled a large
hat that was beautiful but un-
fashionable down over her rough-
cut copper-colored hair und stood
for a long moment staring at the
mirrored reflecUon of the full mouth
and wide set gray eyes which domi-
nated her face.
It was not, strictly speaking,
beautiful face, and Alma knew It.
She was aware too that her body
was Just an average, gently rounded
body looking neither older nor
younger than her 26 years. As a
rule. Alma cared very little about
her appearance excepting only that
13 Gulda
IS Folding bad
ll Mimic
IB Journeys
19 Japanese
outcast
30 Oriental
measure
21 Chief priest
of a shrine
23 Paradise
2ft Disorder
27 Station (ab.)
23 Correlative
of either
29 Notary public
<»b.)
20 Tear
22 It Uvea In tha
these women crush corn and roll I we expect that deliveries In fiscal
t into a moist paste from which 1953 will be five or six times the
tortilla dough is kneaded. The dough fiscal 1951 rate. Tank and. auto-
lonum | motive deliveries arc exDectcd to be
Is called "masa.
Since World war II. research has
a errent. 29 Dawn (pjet.) 40 Bewildered
«s“*bW
11 Carriea (colL) J™*!*"
12 Peel
14 East Indies •*•“**
(ab > 22 Abstract
13 Light brow— ^Tnnlhhc,
23 Volcano In 33 AccomplUhea
Slellv 2® ** "■* -
24 Short sleeps underfur
42 Indian
mulberry
43 Encountered
44 Fish
4ft Dry
80 Symbol for
tellurium
S3 Italian river
gone forth In Mexico to boost corn
production by use of new strains
of hybrid.
A new product, therefore. Is In
thc making. It’s a dry flour and
has been developed by a dehydra-
tion process. It Is a sort of ready-
to-use product which eliminates all
of thc old-time hand labor.
motive deliveries arc expected to be
six times as great In fiscal 1952
as in fiscal 1951."
seasonable; inopportune. (Pronounce
mnl-ap-ro-po, both a's as in at.
both o’s as In no. principal accent
on last syllable. "Judging by thc
reaction of the audience, the
speaker’s words were malapropos.”
Sally’s Sallies
By Scott
Look and Learn
24Rsqu(i*
29 Symbol for '
thoron
37 Thus
99- breading
to in rookeries
40 The poplar
4ft Goddess of
Infatuation
44River (Sp.)
47 East Indian
dried tuber
43 Legal point
49 Next
•1 Malayan
ungulate
91 Beat Indian
timber ties
f48cu-.Ua
1.
"Beloved Dia-
ls dynamite detonated by l«-|
nitton or percussion?
2. Who Is thc only prize fighter
ever to hold three world champion-1
ships at the same time?
What states of the U. S. have|
four-letter names?
4. Who was the
ciple?" .
5 What is a "common carrier?" |
ANSWERS
Percussion.
Henry Armstrong.
Iowa, Ohio and Utah.
John.
A railroad, steamship or other
company which carries or trans-
ports passengers or goods for hire. |
1.
2.
3.
4
5.
HERBERT RITES SET TODAY
Services for Mrs. Claude Herbert,
58, Calumet route 1, who died'
Thursday, will be held at 2 p.m.
Sunday In the Christian church at
Calumet with Rev. Edgar Silert,
pastor, officiating. Burial will be
In the Calumet cemetery under
direction of the Benson funeral |
home.
Cff IWI, King rmuttt sjnilicate, 1st.. VoiUUialMMwwg*
"Why there’s another example of how Nature mutches the tall
ami short, dear.”
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Dyer, Ray J. The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 60, No. 240, Ed. 1 Sunday, December 9, 1951, newspaper, December 9, 1951; El Reno, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc924242/m1/4/?q=j+w+gardner: accessed July 5, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.