The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 55, No. 33, Ed. 1 Monday, April 8, 1946 Page: 6 of 8
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t
Four
El Reno (Okla.) Daily Tribune
The El Reno Daily Tribune You Take Whaf You Can Gel These Days
Monday, April 8, 1
A Bine Kibhoii Newspaper Serving a Blue Ribbon Community
l^iied dally except Saturday from 1MI7 South Rock I Aland Avenue,
and eniered ns second-class mnil matter under the act of March 3, I87U.
RAY J. DYER ,
Editor and Publisher
BUDGE HAHLE
News Editor
DEAN WARD
Advertising Manager
The ASSOCIATED PRESS Is exclusively entitled to the use of re-
publlcatlon of all the news dispatches credited to it or not credited by
this paoer, and also to all the local news therein.
All rights of publication of special dispatches herein also are reserved.
MEMBER
SOUTHERN NEWSPAPER
PUBLISHERS ASS’N.
MEMBER
OKLAHOMA PRESS
ASSOCIATION
DAILY SUBSCRIPTION
BY ('AKRIEIt
Due Week
Three Months
One Year ..
RATES
BY MAIL IN CANADIAN AND
ADJOINING COUNTIES
$ .20 Three Months____________„—$1A0
$2.2ft Six Months. ________ $3.00
_____$8.00 One Year___________ $5.00
Including Sales Tax
Moodiiy. A aril 8. 1946
Great sagis of antiquity have tried to make Hear to us that there is
no limit to the power of laith. Isa: 43:2: When thou v/nlkcst through
the fire thou shall not be burned.
Mistaken Zeal
JF the United States has had opportunity to learn any-
thing: about international relations in the 160 years of it'
national existence, that lesson is that intervention in the
internal affairs of another country, however morally com-
mendable. is seldom welcomed and still more seldom re-
warded.
The Centnd Americans never liked it. The Russians
didn’t like it a flu* their Holshevik revolution of 1017. The
Argentinians aiifl ihe Spaniards don’t like it.
And now it appears that the Chinese dont’ care for it.
either. Or, if perchance they no, they certainly have a
very peculiar way of displaying their Oriental affection.
For reports from Manchuria indicate that neither the Nat-
ionalist armies nor the Communist forces arc paying any
attention to th»* American envoys who now are touring
Manchuria in an effort to stop the civil war. Roth sides,
dispatches say, fear that the delegations will "interfere
with their military operations!”
# # *
fpiIE current dispute has been going on for a great many
years, you know. And the manner in which it has l>een
conducted has H’lected ;jtil< credit to either Generalissimo
Chiang Kai-shek, «»i his Communist adversaries.
The ancient struggle continues now, on an accelerated
basis, in the era of so-called "reconstruction." The Nat-
ionalists and the Ited.s battle one another openly in Man-
churia—and while they do,%lhe Russians calmly Vo about
their unilateral business of stripping Manchurian plants
of the machinery China desperately needs.
4 # *
QH, yes, a formal agreement to cease hostilities was
signed recently in Chungking, and official armistice
Hollywood
Film Shop
By Patricia Clary
United Pres* Oorreipoodiat
XXIV
a ki kt . . ^outcome? Wouldn’t you like'lure. But he’ll have to stop
ANN was in the kitchen, making I to go on to school?” dunking. HeLa.”
u chocolate Bavarian cream, i "Ol course Hut h<
teams, composed of Nationalist, Communist, and American "\Vhv not?" Susie demanded ln-
Hut how can I? I’m "Yes ma'am. That's what I'm
when Hi into came in from school j a!mo,i eighteen. voti know, and j always lellin’ him. But it don’t
Did you see the doctor?' Hie there'.s no reason for the Home to seem to do no good Ann he’s -of
burst out, without preamble. support me any longer." .such an awful temper, he will get
Ann opened the refrigerator "I thougnt we might send von into rights. And he’s awful jsal-
U the University." Ann said, sort ous cl me. ma'am.” she added, not
of diffidently. 'without pride.
Susie stared at her, wide-eyed., ""But, Helga. you don’t give him
I “Do you mean that?" |nny occasion to be jealous, do
door, and shoved the meld iiv-ide.
"Yes, mv Susie, and it’s all very
true. Picture ine ns a fond
mother if you can”
"peacemakers,” are now circulating hopefully in the battle
area. At least, the Americans are; key Nationalist rep-
resentatives, it seems, are missing, and the Red envoys have
been mysteriously delayed. Hut they are encountering a
studied deafness wherever they go.
The Chinese belligerents know, even if their American
"benefactorsV don't, that this cease-firing concord is noth-
ing new. One has been signed every so often for 10 years Rrft*c now0"
or more, and they all have meant the same thing—nothing.
The fighting coni in ties unabated, until finally a Red gen-
eral is "kidnaped" oi a Nationalist loader is "outraged,"
and the struggle again acquires official status.
A curious and deplorable situation, unquestionably.
But the Chinese apparently like it that wav. And, after
all. it's their country.
dignantly. "You’ll make n beau-
tiful mother, Mrs. Drake, What
the world needs is more mothers
Ukp you ”
"So nice to be answering a cry-
ing neca of the* world," Ann mur-
mured.
"Aren’t you going
I IOLLYWOOD, Apr. 8 — (U.R) —
1 Samuel Pepys, whose peeping
diary has entertained tha world
since it was published in 1825, is
back as a technical adviser on a
movie he would thoroughly relish,
"Forever Amber.”
“Pepys kept his diary,” explained
director John Stahl, “from 1669 to
16f®. the very years when the
I I voluptuous Amber St. Clare was
juggling her men In more affairs
than anV hussy has had in all
literature.
“Whenever we ward to know how
to fix the hair of Peggy Cummins,
| who plays Amb?r. or get into an
argument over whether nice girls
wore patches on their faces—and
that doesn’t applv to Amber—then
we go to Pepys."
Pepys told Stahl and his work-
ers that only courtesans wore
patches—and how shocked he was
when his wife joined other women
in trying to popularize them among
good people.
Stahl planned to have Miss
Cummins bathe in a pool. He cut
i he scene out when he found!
Pepvs expressing alarm at the new
fad people had started at Bath.
"Methlnks,” he said, "it cannot
be clean to go so many bodies in
the same water.”
"Pepys helped us the mast in
telling us about the way rooms
were furnished,” Stahl said. "Reg-
inald Gardiner will play his scenes
as King Charles II in rooms we
have reconstructed in detail from
Pcppvs' accounts.”
The queen’s boudoir will look
as Pepys pictured it.
"She had nothing but some
pretty pious pictures and books of
devotion and her holy water at
her head, as she sleeps, with her
dock by her bedside, wherein a
lamp burns that tells her the time
of the night at any time,” Pepys
wrote.
Pepys told 20th Century-Fox
that everyone, including the wo-
men. stood up when Charles II
danced, that it would be all right
for Miss Cummins and C o rnel
Wilde to go to a puppet show and
that cock fighting was the main
gambling sport of the day.
'But we’re not going all the way
with Pepys.” Stahl said. "He says
Mr. Breger
By Mfi
"How many zeros in a million?”
Behind the Scenes
In Washington
to tell Mr.
WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: Use
nlw.n. did say you were Iho coulrtn't keep out ol personal dis- mly when referring to a conting-
{ WCOtCSt IMMSOll ill I HO wnrlrfl" vDm ilKOimv ivifb #Iia ti-hn . ...
olayers will,
scratch either.’
And they won’t
Uni hull. I’m a great devotee I you?
of the Gospel ol betting Or,” Ann • Well, ma’am. 1 can’t help it everyone had lice, but non? of our
murmured. when people like me.” Helga fnur-
Hnppiness broke over Susie’s mured,
lace like a wave. She seemed in- Ann looked at Helga. who was
credulous, stunned, unwilling to'lather good-looking in n big. bo-
belicve It for a moment, then, a* j vine sort of way. ”1 suppose not,"
she did believe it, site sprang to Ann said helplessly, thinking with
Ann’s side and hugged her. “I {dismay that Colin was right—she
BY PETER EDSON
NEA Washington Correspondent
WASHINGTON, D. C.—(NEA)—The best official advice
nrvy Acheron Report for international control of atomic
•s to take it easy.
In the first stories that leaked out from members of the
Atomic Energy Committee, the impressii
have arisen that all of a sudden a good ft
waved its magic wand, so that now, by g(
work of the gremlins who first invented the
bomb could be overcome. The idea put i
that through a new process of “dennturi
sionable materials, atomic energy could be
for peaceful purposes like generating pr
curing cancer, but not for nasty purpo?
making bombs.
Unfortunately, the news isn’t quite that
How the denaturing is done is not revea
Edson the Process is not new. It is explained tl
. „ tcr,al already made for use in bombs can
natured, as well as fissionable materials still in their original
Denaturing of fissionable materials does make them use!
bombs. This has been proved. A bomb made out of denatui
“nals ,s a dud. Otherwise, the importance of denaturing
energy materials is decidedly limited.
Lesson in English
Man's still ahead of nature in destructive power.
Strikes cost more than floods. Man can do more harm just
by doing: nothing than nature can by her darndest. War’s
a ^till better example. World War I cost $10,000,000,000
to start with, more than all the fires and earthquakes and
floods in history. With the opening: of World War II nature
learned more than over what a piker she is.
There’s just as. much sense in worrying* as there is in
advising others not to.
Tin* idea nowadays is to send stowaways back home
without seeing a thing—except that they made a mistake.
A style expert says a man can be well dressed with
14 suits. Hurrah! Most of us are within about IB of it!
A Georgia woman reported to police that boys released
five pet canaries from their cages. Call out the flying
squad!
Down Memory Lane
Ann looked a 111 tie Impatient. | sweetest perron in i he world!” she | elisions with the people who
"I thought we had willed that. Ol |exclaimed extravagantly. i worked lor her. It was awfully
coui'M' I'm not going 'o tell him—I Ann wasn’t altogether pleased, undignified, and certainly not
II would | She didn’t like thinking If liersellLsuitable to her position in Port.
as .“.vert, it seemed u bit insipid. 'Drake. "Ill speak to Mr. Han-
"It’ll be Colin’s money—not mine |st‘!1, •v^(* SJ,K1 lirmly, rind left the
■that does it," she said.
not until he <*cts back
be silly."
"I think you ou.-nt to
Susie said stubbornly.
‘11 him,’
room.
'Well. I won’t—and. Susie!" "it's your idea though," Susie
Ann said sharply, surprising a I insisted,
purposeful look on the girl’s face,
(To He Continued)
Apr. 8, 1921
At o’clock this afternoon, A. Jack Kivett was sworn
into office a* mayor of the city of El Reno by P. P. Duffy,
retiring mayor. Mayor Kivett announced the following
appointments: John Laird, chief of police; Will Lamb,
F. E. Loomis and Tom Fariay, policemen; Orville Enloe,
traffic officer; Charles McCain, chief of fire department;
Joe Kelly asistant thief; Ike Curry, mechanic; Frank
Wright, member of the department; Dr. G. W. Taylor, city
physician; William McCutcheon, sewer man in sanitary
department; Dan Harris, city scavenger; M. B. Cope, city
attorney and police judge.
George LeVan, who attends the University of Okla-
homa, spent the week-end with his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
E. S. LeVan.
Miss Vinita McDonald entertained at an informal card
party Saturday evening.
Apr. 8, 1936
El Reno highachool’s track team, coached by LoVorn
Walker, came through to place in three events in the Bison
relays at Shawnee Friday night under direction of the
Oklahoma Baptist university.
Approximately 1.000 children under the age of 12
years from El Reno and Canadian county participated in
the eighth annual Easter egg hunt sponsored by the local
Kiwanis club at Legion park. ‘
The 1935-36 term in the majority of Canadian county
rural schools will close Friday, Apr. 17, with 52 districts
having maintained only eight-month terms, according to
Miss Glen Evelyn McCarthy, county superintendent.
’'remember that it i.sn’t any ol
your business! I can’t think of
anything wox.se than Colin’s learn-
ing it from someone other than
me.” Will h war a fortunate way
ol putting It, she thought, watch-
ing the look of rebellion on Susie's
face lading into conviction that
Ann wax right, at It \st on that
point.
That night, after Susie had gone
to bed. Ann settled down with a
new magazine and a ciwaret. but
she didn't read. Why shouldn’t
they adopt Susie? Give her a
family, end give themselves a
head start on one. She could hear
Colin teasing her alx>ut it -"When
you go in for maternity, you do it
in a pig way. don’t you, darling?"
But why not? On Susie1* own ac-
count, slie was awfully food with
babies, and they’d have one for
bet to coin* with before too long.
But of course, they wouldn t turn
her into a servant — she would
definitely be the daughter of the
house. Bend h *r to college- *he
wondered how her sorority would
tuke to an orphan. Still, Colin
Drake's daughter—and she would
be legally that—would have a
status of her own. It was defi-
nitely an idea
* * *
ipHE idea took a i inner hold on
"Urn huh.” Ann admitted. "Bet-
ter run a Ion , darling, or you’ll be
late." She kissed Susie's cheek,
then spanked her to propel her on
her way. She felt very good.
* ♦ *
Problem a Day
4 S she lit n cigaret, Helga Car-
* polio came in. "Good morn-
ing, Helga," Ann said pleasantly.
"You can clear the things away
and do the dishes Ix'iorc you start
on the washing. I'm going to walk
into town.”
"Good mornin’. Mis’ Drake,”
Helga answered. ‘‘You don’t need
to go lor the mail if you don't
wimta—my Pete'll bring it out if
you want. He don’t have nothin'
else to do.”
"Oil dear, Helga. Has Pete lost
his job again?” She was getting a
little tired of finding jobs for Pute
Carpello. He was such a good
carpenter, too. "I’ll speak to Mr.
Hansen and see if he can use him
A man sold two horses for the
same price. One horse gave him a
profit of 20 per cent, the other
horse a loss of 20 per cent. If
his net loss on the whole trans-
action was $25. what did
horse cost him’
3nt event regarded as probable; as,
"It is likely to rain tonight.” Us?
liable when referring to a oossible
'vent regarded as disastrous; as,
“You are liable to fall if you are
not careful.”
OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED:
| Column. Pronounce kol-um. not
kol-yum.
OFTEN MISSPELLED: Breath
(noun). Breathe (verb).
SYNONYMS; Talkative, loquac-
ious, garrulous, voluble.
WORD STUDY; "Use a word
three times and it is yours.” Let
us increase our vocabulary by mas-
tering one word each day. Today's
each {word; ARROGANT; unduly proud;
overbearing; haughty. “Praise has
different effects .... it makes a
J I is now explained that it is possible to "imdennturO” I
not tired materials and to make bombs out of the stuff
processed. But this undenaturing is a complicated business.
»ru°n^ °rrnight **.* the back room of any drugstore.
1 he important point is that denaturing offers a partial me
controlling the manufacture and licensing of fissionable m
for peacetime uses, reducing the danger that those materials
converted into bombs.
/he report prepared by a committee working with Underse
of Mate Dean Acheson is not a complete plan on how this m
done. The committee started with the usual approach, tr
control the use of bombs either by renunciation or an el
system of inspection. Both methods were discarded as impr
'J'HE next step was to try to control the one indispensab
terial*—uranium—at its source. That suggested that the
ship ol all uranium deposits should be transferred to an intern
organization, a world corporation under the United Nations
Acheson report merely outlines how this might be done.
Denaturing is just one step by which uranium could he
relatively safe for licensed use in the production of power,
search, and in medicine. What happens next is that the A
Kepor will be studied by Congress and by the State, War. anc
Departments. They may throw it in the wastebasket and co
with something better.
.. !,he-Ul S- pnliry is determined, it will he submitted
united Nations Atomic Energy Commission, on which F!
Baruch is the U. S. representative. The UNO Commission m
^cpt, or it may reject, the Acheson Report recommendations.
ANSWER
$250 and $375. Expianation-1-5! wise man modest, but a fool more
cf the first less 1 5 of the second
equals $25; or 4 5 of the first
less 4 5 of live second equals $100.
Also. 4 5 ol the first equals 6 5 of
the second, since they were sold
for the same price at 1 5 loss and
1 5 gain. Combining. 6 5 of the
second less 4 5 of the second
equals $100, or 25 equals $100 and
5 5 equals $250, the cost of the
second horse. But. 1 5 of the first
less $50 <1 5 of the second> equals
$25; 5 5 equals $375.
arrogant.”—Feltham.
U. S. Senator
1
AiiN»i‘r to l’rcvloua I'uxslc
her mind the next morninr.
At breakfast, Susie raid non-
chalantly. ”1 forgot to tel) you—
I can graduate in June. •J've got
enough extra credits so I can, if
I come out all right this .semes-
ter. And if I don’t, it'll be because
I'm a naif-wit,” she added fer-
vently, "with all the help you’ve
been giving me.”
"That will l)o grand. Susie."
"And then I’ll get a job . . .
Mrs. Drake?” she said sort of
hesitantly.
"What, honey?”
"I’ve been wondering ... do
you have to have a leal nurse
lor your baby? I’m awfully good
*ith babies, and I thought maybe
you'd give me a Job. I’d like that
an awful lot better than some old
office job. It’d be wonderful to
work for you all the time!” Susie's
big brown eyes shone with ado-
ration.
"But, honey—I'm not sure, of
course, but I’ve discussed it a little
with Colin, a long Mine ago—how
HORIZONTAL 5 Canine
1,9 Pictured ti Verbal
U. S. Senator 7 Depend
14 Repmced 8 Revise
15 Foitibly 9 Club
16 Circle part 10 Not (prefix)
17 Small galley 11 Ikinjab
19rWeb*-s capital
20 Sullen 12 Prejudiced
22 Slot k* t suffix) 13 Attacks
23 Sloe Kings 18 Whirlwind
24 Duck 21 Mends
Hi
MfcJ ■■■■■■
i|P
mm
26 Cap
27 Range
28 Pipt-F
29 While
30 Hypothetical
force
311 ct in
34 Less
38 Raises
39 Concerning
40 Browns
41 Fail to hit
45 Fete
46 Anger
47 In this
49 Pitch
50 Musical sign
52 Devious
54 Play the part
of host
55 Heights
VERTICAL
1 Barters
2 Epic
3 Spanish coin
4 Old Testa-
• ment (ab.)
23 Attending
25 Reposes
26 Solid food
(med)
31 Creative 42 Rainbow
worker 43 Dispatched
32 More beloved 44 Shrub genus
33 Hiding school 47 Torrid
35 Tidier
36 Unlasten
37 Begins
41 Myself
48 Insect egg
51 Natrium
(symbol)
53 Runic (ab.)
•
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Former Justice Roberts
Heads Refresher Course
PHILADELPHIA, Apr. 8—(U.R)—
Over 200 ex-service attorneys are
being offered legal refresher
courses by a group of distinguish-
ed law experts, the University of
Pennsylvania announced recently.
Daily lectures by a panel of au-
thorities headed by Owen J. Rob-
erts, fonner U. S. supreme court
justice, are bringing the veterans
up to date on important legal
changes that have occurred ,since
they joined the sendee.
POLITICAL
ANNOUNCEMENTS
The Tribune is authorized to
announce the candidacies of tha
following individuals, subject to the
primary election July 2: '
Odds on Twin Births
Are Claimed 1 to 86
CHICAGO, Apr. 8- (UR)—A 38-
year-old mother is three times
more likely to have twins than a
woman of 18.
H. H Newman, professor of
zoology at the University of Chi-
cago, said twins have only one-
fifth the chance of survival before
birth and in infancy is single ba-
bies. because the human species
"if highly socialized for single-
off-spring births."
In an article in the 1946 Ency-
clopedia Britannica, Newman said
that more than half of all twins
are born prematurely. The hazards
increase for triplets, quadruplets
and quintuplets.
Persons of North European ex-
traction are more likely to have
twins, Newman said. The average
odds on twin births are one to 86,
Newman said.
Etiquette
Q. Should all members
family remain at the ta!
the meal is finished, wh
are no guests?
A. Yes; this is good
The person who is not
when at home is liable t<
the same manners when i
Q. On what social occi
a man privileged to wear
ness suit?
A. He may wear a busi
to any informal occasioi
8 p. m., an informal 1
breakfast, etc.
Q. Should a man use
hand or left hand when
his hat?
A. Either hand, but it s
the one farthest away f
person to whom he is spe
Sally’s Sallies
By Wiliam I
Democratic Ticket
For Governor:
ROY J. TURNER
For 6th Dist. Representative:
BILL LOGAN
For State Senator:
JIM A. RINEHART
For District Judge:
BAKER H. MELONE
For County Attorney:
HARRY LORENZEN
For County Treasurer:
A. T. “Cap" MARCH
For Conuniuloner, Dint, No. J:
FLOYD ELLISON
Reoublican Ticket
For County Sheriff:
JACK SMITH
He s an ancestor, Gerald. Our family’s quite ai
crat.ic with famous forefathers, and Mother has
four husbands.”
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Dyer, Ray J. The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 55, No. 33, Ed. 1 Monday, April 8, 1946, newspaper, April 8, 1946; El Reno, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc924273/m1/6/: accessed April 20, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.