The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 60, No. 26, Ed. 1 Friday, March 30, 1951 Page: 4 of 6
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”■....."-—-- ' i „„__ii
^JElRenoJJoily Tribune Aj^tinvonderfuiw^
*““®d **C*P< Saturday from 207 South Back MaaTTeme,
**" ***•»*< •» **”B<>-claas null matter under the act of March I, irIt.
BAT J. DTER ~ ~~
Miter and PeMlabar
DEAN WARD LCO D. WARD
tartmao Nuat* New MMar
RAERT SrEEOSDEB
Ctrealatlea end Offlee Manager
MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED TRESS
Hie Associated Pruts I* entitled exclusively to the use for repubtisatlon
if ail the local new* printed In this newpaper, a* wan aa all AT new*
dispatches jk
SOUTHERN NEWSPAPER <«WlBofc> OKLAHOMA PRESS
_ rPBU*ll**B AMV ASSOCIATION
DAILT SUBSCRIPTION RATES ST MAIL IN CANARIAN AND
* *T CARRIER adjoining counties
One Week ..............| te Six Mentha _______ ____ g| jo
2r,f Month...................I US Three Mania............ sin
2"' Vw ............ 111.06 One Tear ......... "faff
Elsewhere In State-One fear MAO--Out af State .. S1140
Tncludlnr Sale* Tw
Friday, March 36, 1661
It I* darkest before the dawn. Faith can mere mountain*. Yen ataat
lean, te make the inn stand stU! Will the Lord cart off forever? and
will he be favorable no more?—Psa. 77:7.
West May Get Iran Oil
JT would be idle to pretend that Iran’s action in taking
over the Anglo-Iranian Oil company is not a setback for
the West. But its effect is not likely to be as Immediate as
some .statesmen fear.
Under British management a high percentage of the oil
produced was shipped out to Europe and the United States.
This country got about 40 percent of total output. Some
was allotted to Iran for its own use.
With the fields and refineries nationalized, the Iranian
government may wish to set aside a larger share of produc-
tion for use within the country. But it cannot possibly
utilize the full output of Anglo-Iranian.
The government unquestionably will want to dispose of
the big surplus beyond its own needs. It will be greatly
interested in the revenue to be gained. But who is to buv
and how is the oil to be transported to market?
JRAN has no tanker fleet of its own nnd thus cannot carry
the oil to European and other overseas markets With*
™ "rl»Ti’'Se.u “uld"" ,,,rt"
The thought occurring naturally to most of us is: Whv
cant she sell to Russia? Everybody knows Russia would
nJcftT "lT 01 *°“ld !ove no,lli"K better than to domi-
na^r?^e "hole oil-rich middle east.
Undoubted^ Iran can sell some oil to the Soviet Union.
tank cars' Anri ’m t.18.,tranBport- ^an has few railroad
n<l pipe,‘ne r.uns from Anglo-Iranian’s re-
fineries northward to Russia’s borders. Engineers are
tTree yiarT The"^"^6 c.°“Id fbe1bu.iIt \n Sian two or
years to tmil^f V’nSn W->th ,Steel plentiful- required three
desert ™ ^ 1.000-mile line across the flat Arabian
Mr. Breger
Ffiduy, U§xtk 30, l
Bv Dave Br
By Myles Connolly
COPYRIGHT 1061 BY NCA SERVICE. INC.
• * •
are.hard fact« from which there is no escape. No
it must fice tier'' thC W,'8he8 °f Iran’H ^vernment.
goodTa?’t^oi'l fwiilthC iHmed!ate future the Prospects are
Britain anHUi^TT"e i J° f° to preBent customers.
the U- s- have the tanker fleet to take it from
thToll H ^ 4 g0e* With°Ut 8ayin* that th«y "till want
of theitnnnj^°f c°urse, gravely upset at Iran’s expropriation
vJ, oil properties and is protesting the action as illegal
Yet it ,s hard to see what she can do about it. In the end
some practical settlement which accepts the fact of I ran inn
control would seem to be indicated. °f
Vu,that arrangement is sensible enough it mav vef ho
indefinitely. Wto n^thenM ^S^bhEK
w^. fortS xr,„‘£
driving "E I1”1'™ »re bent on enrol.,,
ormng. Not to mention their automobiles.
as wariS— ,h'y're
^.AJenta' school official says some day the dental drill
.«»ier W"«»'‘ « be
tin.0!; to “e fi™S’ ”* *>■« *«» i- «t-
liSsP^sts,:
’*“P *” “p 40 ‘'"-t"'1
Down Memory Lane
XXVIII
IIM REESE relaxed slightly.
A found words 'Here." He gave
the tiny mannequin to Jean. "I've
had all I want of gold mannequins
for g while.”
"Won't you believe I love you?"
She was emotional, pleading now.
"No, Jean." His words had a cool,
quiet finality to them. “Even If It
were true. I couldn't believe It. I
could never believe you again."
He passed by her, moving clum-
sily to the door He stumbled once
but did not fall. He went out. clos-
ing the door quietly alter him.
Jean, stunned, watched him go
It was a long moment before she
recovered. Then, in panic, she
raced for the door.
Tim! Don't go! Please don't go I"
She cried out into the hall, plead
lng wildly. "Believe me, Tlml
Please don’t go I"
The only sound in answer was
the whir of the elevator on Its way
to the ground floor.
Jean whirled back Into the room,
i an for ihe rear of the apartment.
"Martha!" she screamed as she
ran. "Martha! My shoes! Stockings!
A dress! Hurry, Martha! Hurry!"
♦ * *
fpIM REESE, rushing away from
the shop, as If in some wild
hope of leaving his heartbreak be-
hind him. moved with painful and
clumsy s|iped along the slippery
sidewalk. Twice he slipped and
only the quick hands of passers-by
saved him from falling Once he
stumbled and fell to one knee. It
was only with torturing effort,
holding to the sill of a store win-
dow, that he was able to get back
on his feet. People passing him on
drab, cold day thought him
street
he pitched forward
and lay there.
A few minutes after the ambu-
lance had taken Tim off to the hos-
pital, and tba .crowd had hardly
dispersed, a cab oame to a stop at
the same crossing. In the cab was
Jean, hurrying to Tim's hotel. Every
w*as a picture of an avocado ranch.
The white, red-tiled ranch house
stood on a little rise commanding
a slope dark green with an avo-
cado grove.
"For sale." Tim grinned. "Back
in my old stamping ground, Call-
hair In her silvered gold head" was
still in place but her lovely young
face, usually relaxed and luminou*
was strained and dark with Im-
patience and anxiety.
She leaned forward In her seat
unable to understand why the cab
had stopped. "What's the matter?"
she asked the driver.
'Traffic light, ma'am,”
piled.
fornla.
Midge whistled. “I guess I’d bet-
ter save more than ribbons.”
He put his arm around her.
"Don't worry, hon. Crochet is go-
ing to pay me plenty. And so far
as running the ranch is concerned,
I'm one of the best ranch hands In
the business." He saw her glance
down at the wheel chair, smile,
he re-1 "You look at me," he reproved her,
I "not at the wheel chair."
QEEMS as if people are crowd-
^ lng the warm weather a little
but a young friend called yester-
day to ask for my recipe for bar-
becue sauce.
He said when the moon Is full
again his group of close friends
•n* going to try one of those old-
fashioned moonlight picnics which
I so often mention in this column.
"The boys are going to barbecue
the ribs. Instead of taking care of
the horses as you say they did on
your picnics, and the girls are
going to do all the other odds and
ends of preparation for the feed "
he explained at length, and top-
ped It off with, "I think we'll
have fun, don't you?”
Well, I don't know. Depends on
whether you are looking for en-
joyment or excitement. Moonlight
Picnics are strictly horse-and-
buggy and if you are trying to
gear it to the speed of modem
youth you are In for a horrible
let-down. Anyway m give you the
recipe.
And so over the phone, I dictate
the following, to a lad who has
likely never read a recipe let alone
trying to put the Ingredients to-
gether, to be cooked over an open
fire.
With a pastry brush paint the
surface of the ribs with Figaro’s
liquid smoke. Sprinkle with chop-
ped garlic and salt. Roll tightly
in paper and let stand for a min-
imum of two hours.
To one cup of vinegar add one
cup canned tomato soup, one cup
water. Season with one bay leaf,
one teaspoon prepared mustard
one teaspoon chill powder, one
teaspoon black pepper, one table-
spoon ‘wooster sauce,’ one tea-
spoon dry horseradish, and a dash
of tobasco. Boll five minutes. If
too thick add tomato Juice for
thinner. With a new dish mop
sop the ribs well with sauce. Place
over glowing coals. As the ribs
cook keep turning and sopping
until thoroughly done. Don't
scorch. To barbecue doesn't mean
to blacken and burn. Meat should
be tender, a rich brown color, and
be easily tom from the bone. If
the bone Isn't easily polished the
meat Isn't done.
“Mjr wife is *uppoeed to meet me here at 2 o’clock
★ WASHINGTON COLUMh
*y peter EDson
NBA Washington Correspondent
Economic Aspects of Japanei
Treaty Pose Tough Problem
y°U? She pleadedl "Mad man" She ran her fingers
th the driver. “I have to get to affectionately through his hair *
••All nr___ _
Hollywood
Film Shop
the hotel immediately. It's terribly
important! Please!"
m . . March .30, 19.31
«*• «f 'he MH-lCShU™W,,"n Farre"' rep""""-
Methodist church. th aud,to™ of Central
returned*?8 deputi« and. a*-e being
brought about by the 1930hCenS?UP ^ Pn°r 4° the change
tarium and C^tto”hospital8 hem f''Tht0 4the Reno w-ni-
association, accordingP to wnrH b'V Te Arperican Medical
Ward, must pass iZrefion to rS"! hfre Thur9da>’'
death rate must be under » „„_»r?Ce ve honor and the
the only city of its size to receivSeTno^^’ E' Re"° is
w „ . „ „ March 30, 1941
funeral home here and^HUp^S it'S'kSTu. Garrison
home, they announced today.P * 4 Kerrick s funeral
RenoWc%"S!umndnn which onTt? e,6Cted th« El
was cast. They are HenrykXhL Vote8 in ^s
incumbents, and Eugene Stanshnlv T *.UC1U8 Babcock, jr.,
Luther C. GadberrJ2J[" ,thf-only oth«- ™ce,
of education over G. W. Timberiake * ®ct,on on the board
drunk or demented, or both.
HI* hurt now blinded him and his
nnnd was blurred with madness. He
wanted to move faster, faster. He
weaved, tottered, slipped. Cars bare-
ly missed him and horns cursed
him as he stumbled across traffic-
crazy streets.
He was headed for his hotel but
only vaguely. He went south, then
west, then south, then west. HI*
one clear purpose was to get away
as quickly and completely as pos-
sible from Jean and the past.
He came to Fifth avenue. The
lights flashed red against him as he
reached the curb. Traffic leaped
forward. But Tim did not stop. He
lunged forward through the mov
lng cars. One car avoided him
then, a second car. A third, a cab
turned sharply as it bore down on
him. Tim stumbled.
A horn barked wildly, brakes
screeched. The cab skidded. Its
front wheels swerved, avoiding Tim
as he lurched about trying to regain
his balance. But the body of the
swerving cab1 sideswiped him. threw
him to the pavement.
The cab driver slipped out of his
cab. made his way through the
crowd that had immediately ringed
Tim on the pavement.
Drunk as a hoot owl." the cab
driver muttered.
Tim. struggling painfully, got to
his knees. “I’m all right." he said.
"Just give me a minute.”
A traffic officer
* * *
/■1HRISTMA8 had come to Cedar-
^ brook, and gone. At the hospital,
Midge stood on a tall stepladder,
taking down the ribbon - bowed
green fir sprays from over the fire-
place in the recreation room.
Tim, In his wheel chair, was back
a distance, watching her. The two
were alone In the room.
"Be sure to keep the red ribbon,"
he called to her. "We're going to
n*«d It next year."
"Thought you were going to be
rich next year." Midge called down
to him over her shoulder.
"Yup. But come here a minute."
He held up a booklet. "Just take a
look at this."
He wheeled the chair over to the
foot of the stepladder. She climbed
down, poined him . The booklet was
“All right. You wait and see." He
looked around to make sure they
were alone in the room, then,
quickly he kissed her. "Remember."
he said with his grin. "I can still
wiggle my toes.”
THE END.
Woman Gem Smuggler
Gets Prison Sentence
NEW YORK, March 30 —OP)_
Mrs. Eta Hoffman, 26-year-old
Belgian emigre. Thursday was sen-
tenced to 18 months in prison for
smuggling $498,008 worth of dia-
monds into the country last Jan. 22.
Customs agents found 1,674 carats
of top quality diamonds In the hol-
lowed-out heels of the womans
platform-type shoes when she
alighted from an Incoming Antwerp
plane at Idlewild airport. Later
they found 1,703 carats in her lug-
gage.
on duty at
the intersection, pushed his way
-- pusneo ms way
through the crowd. He came as Tim,
holding to the cab. had grimly
W°'Tak halfway to hi* fast,
said.
A-,,.-*- p- . Answer to Previoua Punk
Aquatic Bird EI aHI nmn mrw
HORIZONTAL
1 Depicted
aquatic bird
SMost
abbreviated
13 Ripped
16 Japanese
statesman
16 Decay
16 It has a-
pouch
1? Vase
16 AU right (ab.) I* Depart
16 Caresses 16 Affection
31 Exists 20 Notched
32 Oame of 23 Sea nymph
chance 25 Instated
24 Domestic slave 32 Expunges
3 Wile
4 Earth
goddess
5 Daze
6 Retained
7 Spoken
8 Unusual
• Tungsten (ab )
10 French coin
11 Reliquary
12 Showy
pretense
nksmm
1Z1UU m
lllililLJUgjij; j;.ji*ii j
Liuaiu ■ Ul-JH ■ fdN *M
S3 Chinky
33 Respect
36 Good luck
bringer /
41 Injure
43 Sea eagle
43 Prayer ending
44 Repose
45 Diminutive of
Edward
45 Guided
50 Observe
S3 “Smallest
State” (ab.)
53 Anglo*VYench
(ab.)
It easy, bud." the officer
‘Better stay where you are."
I’m all right," Tim said.
27 Stagger
25 Highway (ab.)
2
4
s
r
k 1
I
10
II
ii
28 Sun god
30 Half an em
A
r
31 Near
32 Great Lake
s
Ik
i
11
34 Set of players
37 Free*
P
to
1
!J
38 Icelandic saga
25
40 Daubed
JL
1 a
Ip
(>b.)
a
47 Sun
46 Equipped
Jo
IS
50 Thus
31 Alkaloids
53 Air (comb,
form)
in
54 Remainder
6611 has webbed
w
1
4
w
I
VERTICAL
1 Beat
EL
SB has a-
bill
W
66
By Patricia Clary
United Press Correspondent
TTOLLYWOOD, March 30—(UP)—
There’s nothing like a visit to
southern California, Monty Woolley
contends, to make you appreciate
home.
After a vacation iq happy Holly-
wood, to Woolley, any place else
looks good.
“This distant outpost of Times
Square," he sputtered, "1? the hack-
and-sneeze capital of the world.
“They dilute the fog with a gen-
erous helping of obnoxious exhaust
fumes. TTiey throw in the aroma
of yesterday's orange blossoms.
They had a few other homebred
Ingredients and they have the mak-
ings of a combination powerful
enough to take the curl out of
man's whiskers."
It's so bad, he said, that he has
to submit his beard to special
makeup ministrations for 20th Cen-
tury-Fox' "Will You Love Me In
December, the bait that dragged
him here in the first place
"My beard takes on an added
luster," he explained coldly, "in
places where the seasons change."
Woolley doesn't like California
even when the sun beams down
from cloudless skies.
"An absolutely merciless celestial
oven,” he calls it.
"It saps a man’s vigor, fades the
purest color, slows all activity to a
still-life tableau and drives the en-
tire community, like lemmings on
the march, to the seashore," he
said.
The pace slackens, a drabness
sets in, the creative processes be-
gin to atrophy and you have a city
of bench sitters, warming their
tired bones in the sunlight, ab-
sorbed only in the sbamefui beg-
ging of the park pigeons."
Give him the Empire state, he
argued, even Jf he has te stay In
his hotel room to keep out of th*
rain, snow, cold or heat.
"At least It will be air condi-
tioned,” he said.
As soon as his movie chore Is
completed, he's going back to home
base.
H7ASHINQTON, March 30 —
iNEAi— Purely economic as-
pects of making a peace treaty with
Japan present some interesting
problems. Most attention so far has
been paid to the political and mili-
tary parts of the treaty. Whether
or not to rebuild Japan's army and
navy and to make Japan an Inde-
pendent nation Is of course the
first worry of countries which the
Japs overran in the last war.
But whether to rebuild Japan's
industrial and commercial might
presents even graver risks, it was
the old Japanese empire's business
aggressiveness—the desire to create
u greater east Asia co-prosperity
sphere—that really started the last
war in the Pacific. Japan wanted
to dominate the whole Oriental
market, with its billion potential
customers.
The Japanese have been, and
are today, the only people In the
Orient with the capacity and poten
tial for a highly industrialised
civilization. At the end of the war
a deliberate effort was made to
cripple this capacity. In particular,
plants that could make armaments
were dismantled
Japan's steel producing capacity
is 10 million tons a year. Only io
percent of u. S. capacity, but it’s
Important. If the Communist block
of countries had it. it would be
that much of an additional strain
on American steel-making capacity,
and it might throw the balance in
favor of the Commies. So Japanese
steel production must be main-
tained.
bors of Japan must be overc
| They all fear revival of Ja
competition in the Pacific,
don't want to see the Ja
merchant marine fleet bui
again, it was the third larg
the world before the last war
anese competition made it a
tough for other sea-faring n
because, with cheaper labor,
could undercut rates.
fpHERE is some belief
E tl
IPHE same is true of electric
A power, aluminum and copper
production, textile and chemicals
production. The trouble Is that
Japan's former source of raw ma-
terials for these manufactures have
been cut off.
In the case of steel, Japan form-
erly got Its Iron ore and coking
coal from Manchuria. Red China
and Russia now control these sup-
plies. So If Japan’s steel production
Is to be kept going at capacity, it
may be up to the United tSates,
Canada, Indonesia and other coun-
tries to make up the deficiencies.
And if the Commies take over all
of Southeast Asia, Japan’s rice sup-
plies will be cut off. •
, This may mean the setting up ol
some new trade patterns on top of
the old patterns which contributed
to Japan’s prosperity before the
war. In the opinion of American
trade experts, this can be done. But
In doing It. a lot of opposition from
the British. Australians, New Zea-
landers. Filipinos and other neigh-
that Japanese exports <
directed to benefit U. 8. g
ment interests. The Point Foi
gram offers an example. Bi
up the economy of so-callad i
developed countries requires
of plows, hand tools and'
hardware that they can’t
themselves. If these eountrle*
buy it cheaper from Japan, it
ease the burden on the U. 8
Payer somewhat.
Collecting reparations Iron
Japanese Is another subject
to the heart of many cou
overrun by the Japs. This is
ticularly true of the Filipinos,
are having a hard time m
both ends meet. They would
ready cash damages from J
Indonesia. Indo-Chiha and M
still show scars of Japanese i
patlon. Even Darwin, Australis
bombed by Jap planes.
The argument against rei
tions Is that the Japanese si
don’t have what It takes to
them. As far, as the Filipinos-
biggest sufferers—are conce:
they have already received :
post-war aid from the Ui
States than they would be abi
collect from Japan in reparat
Look and Learn
1. What Is the difference be
cardinal and ordinal numbers
2. What is the property of
leability In metals?
3. If you speak of the bark!
dogs, and the cooing of pi
how do you speak of the
made by stags?
4. In what popular sport
the winning team, In order tc
move backwards?
5. What relation was the BI
character, Ruth, to Naomi.
ANSWERS
1. Cardinal numbers are one,
three, four. etc. Ordinal nut
are first, second, third, fourth
2. The property of bek% n
ible to thin sheets.
3. The belling of stags,
4. Tug of war.
5. Daughter-in-law.
Commander Changed
For Submarine Fleet
WASHINGTON, March 30—(A*)—
Rear Admiral Charles B. Momsen
will relieve Rear Admiral John H.
Brown, jr., as commander
Pacific fleet submarine force In
May, the navy announced Thurs-
day. Admiral Momsen is now
tag assistant chief of naval
atione for fleet readiness.
Admiral Brown will
maadant of the fourth naval dis-
trict at Philadelphia In Jung, re-
lieving Dear Admiral Hems
Schuinnann, who will re Use
June 30.
“C“M' “* 1
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Dyer, Ray J. The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 60, No. 26, Ed. 1 Friday, March 30, 1951, newspaper, March 30, 1951; El Reno, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc924257/m1/4/: accessed April 23, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.