The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 53, No. 309, Ed. 1 Tuesday, February 27, 1945 Page: 4 of 6
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BUDGE HABLB
Nm Editor
The El Reno Daily Tribune| Inside
The Axis
El Reno, (Okku) Daily Tribune
'Yuh Wanna Fight?
CmhhHt
eteept SSiiv ttm mn Bodth Hock'bland imo,
** ml) wittw under th* act of March I, 1171.
MV I. DM
Ml Ur *a£ Polisher
DUN WARD
Advertising Manager
•Bu ASSOCIATED FRB8B b exclusively entitled to the uae of re-
pa bl lea tlon of all the Mta dbpatotaa eredlWd to It or not credited by
i paper, and abo to oD the Mat news therein.
AB rUhU of publication* of wo Bel dU»aUtio> heretn aim are reierved.
Presell ting tort* Anembtod
by the Poreloa ferric*
Divblon of the Office ef
War Infermallea
Ilf ASHINGTON. Feb. J7— (Special)
” —Heinrich Himmler Insist* that
OKLAHOMA PBBM
ASSOCIATION
member* of lib As, a* the "elite
guard” of Nazidom, should serve
e* examples for the rest of the
Oerman people by rearing large
_“Aryar>" families,
DAILT SUBSCRIPTION RATES ST MAIL IN CANADIAN AND Following Is part of n captured
BY CARKIDR ADJOINING COUNTIES | letter, dated Aug. 20. 1044. In
0m Week---------------$ JO ItoNO Month*_________|l.M,wll,-h »n 8« police officer ex-
llire# Uohths--*----- —ISAS Si* Month*________________*3.00 , P|nf™ to his superior why lie hus
........IBM OR* Teat_____________Rft 00 . hr*'*n childless:
Including Bab* Tn | "Declaration in re ... the un-
——■—----*7.—‘.‘tr****’*"'** ......... 1 married and childless status of my
Tu«Mwy, rfbnMry *7, IMS /perton:
■' 7ZZ 7 77“ I • '*Wnr condiMon.s on thf» one
If «* ore on God’s aide no bad thing eon happen to as In this world 'hand, mv transfer from Vlenn i to
M the Mbl am with thee and no man shall set on thee to hurt 'Alsace and further transfer to the
and
Manpower Delay
**I1/HAT ban become of the call of the president ......
the judgment and reanoned pleas of General Mar-
shall and Admiral King?’* Secretary of War Stimeon ask-
ed in hin broadcast appeal for a national service law.
“Will those who have trusted to these men the lives
of 12,000,000 citizena in uniform,” he continued, “at the
eleventh critical hour deny to them the strength they say
they need to bring this conflict to a close, with the saving
of as many men, as many lives ,as possible?"
These are not rhetorical questions. Mr. Stimson ob-
viously wants information. So do many others. The an-
swers, which have long rested with congress, rest for the
moment with the senate military affairs committee.
Senator O’Mahoney has charged Mr. Stimson with
giving an "unbalanced impression" of the manpower sit-
uation. He says that “our soldiers have not been let down
by the |teople on the home front.”
JJUT what exactly does that mean? Does it mean that we
are producing up to capacity, that we are providing
our forces and our allies with overylhing required of us,
that we are building up a war-goods stock pile for the
bigger operations to come? Does it mean that the-war is
progressing ut its maximum possible speed? Does it mean
that not a life has been lost, since the first dark days,
for want of a gun or a shell or a plane?
We doubt that the senator meant all that. Absentee-
ism and labor turnover have been with us since the war
started. So have manpower hoarding, industrial ineffici-
ency nnd bad distribution of labor.
Ijust July the president asked congress for a national
service law. The request was tentative and, to use one or
Mr. Roosevelt's favorite words, “iffy.” Congress can’t he
blamed too much for not having put it at the top of the
agenda. Rut last month the president requested such n
law again. This time it wns urgent, with no strings at-
tached. r
rr 4 * *
{X1NGRESS has heard a lot of testimony since then. Mr.
t? Stimson and Mr. Forrestal, General Marshall and Ad-
miral King, WPB Chairman Krug and others have echoed
the president’s plea. Representatives of orgahized business
nnd organized labor have opposed it. Oertainlv enough
evidence and advice have been gathered to make a ver-
dict possible.
If the senate is convinced that our excellent produc-
tion record is the best we can do, and wholly adequate,
then it should have the courage to kill the May hill. Rut
ii it has any doubts, then ft should enact some legisla-
tion to deal effectively with what our military leaders in-
sist is literally a life-and-death emergency.
Balkans, a rex Ion utterly unsuit-
able to provide a marriage partner
for an S3 man—as well as re-
transfer to Alsace. have thus far
prevented me finding a person j
whom I would consider an appro-
priate mate for an sa man.
"I also wish to point out the
difficulties that I, a man without
t church ties, encounter In a (food
Catholic region such as Alsace.
One meets with refusal, In many
c»«es, for confessional or Ideologi-
cal reasons. The attitude of a
large pnrt of the Alsatian popula-
tion toward members of the state
police and the S3 need, In my
opinion, no further elaboration.
Another difficulty In m.v case
exists in the location of my home,
together with my mother, in Vien-
na Unfortunately, I had the ex-
lierlenee that only few of the girls
capable nnd willing to marry show-
ed a real Interest
"Slnee my appointment at poller
Inspector, I hnve created the basis
for the establishment of a family
and I hope In the near future to
submit to my superior officer an
application for engagement and
marriage. The distance separating
me from my prospective bride
'Reich Labor Front Women's
Leader I.ulse Blaasnlg) unfortun-
ately delays the realization of my
plans, very much to my regret.
My own fate, I myself was bom
out of wedlock nnd later adopted
by the husband of my mother,
Impels me not to put an Illegiti-
mate child Into the world, although
see In a child the fulfillment of
TuBBday, February
XXin | Please, my dear Lot
THE HtfRB ' at this time. len t
JoMf Eisner (wallowed hard. He Louts—1'
knew the music He knew It Well. Josef Eisner atruttc
Louis Pleyel was at It
They went out of th
Into the ballroom, U
hall. Into the foyer,
He sweltoWed again, then again.
He pushed hi* way Into tto crowd-
ed music ream.
'8b—unt t* playing” .........
. *. y. ***** ** h* Louis Pleyel outllntn
playing? Me to playing th* mu*ic contract
of Frederte Chopin I" | .._Verv interesting
Deeper and deeper Into th* crowd ' ... v*ry ‘ntereiUng'
he went, with no apologia* for hi* 1 ■h®uM ,ay H I
| you think my contn
•Quiet. Ltoat to playing." !*■
The waits was concluded and i "—Humph. Why *
people were applauding and Joaef | "Josef. I am only in
CHnnftr stopped to join in the bond* j *• ypA Loute, and 1
clapping.
"SuperbI” called out the critic
Kalkbrenner. "But whose muitc out^Lvm!^'*u^ih
Is It? I never heard It."
Josef Eisner peered through the ' 'won “ P®**
dark. "You never- heard it I It Is ~My dear Loute.
n waits, my dear friend—by my pu- "ot ru*h lnt® fa*"**—
pll—Chopin!" 11 ovw-"
“Your pupil I
“Who will give you
• WMS pW|**ll " JW
"—Yes, my dear friend; my pu- Ia that what •«
'—I think of this
I think of that. Hot
of everything at one
on an Impulse? No,
Eisner never acts ha
pll."
“Prove* what I've always said."
replied the sarcastic Kalkbrehner;
"anything sound* good—when play-
ed by Liszt I”
There were calls for quiet. The! years I thought ab<
piano sounded again; a not her. Paris—and now In 11
Chopin composition, the Butterfly -How long will yoi
Etude. The guests were In for an .
evening of Chopin by Liszt. , Loula' de*r L
"—Oood, eh?" Josef Eisner pull-1J a,™W®r l,Jat7 1 w
ed at Kalkbrenner's arm. "Also by; urnmtoi
my pupil_•» mucri x will pronii.se
—And played by Liszt," Kalk-! ’rhey l,ttd 'belr ha
brenner muttered. ! "—Where's Fredei
leave without Frederl
Behind the Scenes
In Washington
BT PETER KDSON
NEA Staff Correspondent
tof ASHINOTON, D. C.—Say you’re a war worker.
toush tiftIP Hlll'ina t ho rlavi
my existence.'
(
lOLONEL GENERAL CARL
t PFI.FTFR - WILDENBRUCK,
the S3 commander who was cap-
tured In h Budapest sewer by the
Russians after directing Oerman
resistance in the Hungarian capi-
tal, lie* been "deeorated" with the
Grand Cross of the Hungarian
Order of Merit by Major Ferenc*
Bsalasi's puppet Hungarian re-
gime.
Baalaal's present whereabouts are
unknown, but the activities of his
moiljr.ette government are still
being publicized by the Nazla In
broadcasts falsely attributed to
"Radio Budapest."
• — *----a war worker. You had a
tough time during the depression but now you've got money In \
and* sometMng1 a C,°theS’ hOU“ C,°theS*
T7>e people In Vashlngton who make studies of your daily life
who are interested m your welfare, who write orders Intended to keep’
- - yc« on an even keel during war times—they and
the people who manufacture and sell you the clothes
you need haye a number of conflicting theories
about how you behave.
Investigators for the Bureau of Labor Statistics
hnve gone Into hundreds of stores nnd found yon
enn’t get the inexpensive lines of clothing which
you need nnd which you used to buy.
Labor unton representatives who claim to be
looking out f*r your interests say that because you
enn’t buy these things you need higher wages.
____ On the other hand, representatives of the textile
Edsrni mills, the clothing manufacturers, the wholesalers
nnd retailers are prone to say you now have more
money than you ever had in your life, that in your present plush
condition you wouldn’t take the old. cheaper lines of merchandise ns
8 ((iiti
By Hazel Hartzog
United Press Correspondent
It’s u quaint
desert their post.
German habit to
Hitler has several
hanjr officials who
hangings coming.
Highways Play Havoc With Cross-Country Trucks
news item. Just getting even.
If you think you look pleasant going around with
dejected look, just consider the prune.
Dt/T if there aren’t any lnexpen«lve clothes for you to buy, say the
representatives of WPB. OCR'. OPA, WLB, BLS. OES and assorted
government alphabetical war agencies, your cost of living will go
up, so will wages, and then cornea inflation.
If you can understand this simple little fairy story you can under-
stand the main points of the big fight now being waged in Washington
over the new War Production Board-Office of Price Administration
orders intended to roll back the cost and increase the supply of the
lower-priced lines of clothing.
It may take some weeks or even months before the consumer who
goes a-shopping for new clothes will be able to see the effects of these
new orders
||OLLYWOOD. Feb. 37 — (U.R) -
Al Dorothy Lamour has learned
about that old saying, "Pride goeth
before a fall." The sultry star,
whose wardrobe for many long years
| wns conflnpd to a strip of cloth
! known ns n sarong, thought she
| had escaped Into t’lamour clothes at
last.
For her role as a Spanish count-
ess in "Masquerade In Mexico" she
wns to be transformed Into a one-
I woman style show with nearly 30
I costumes, all of the latfest mode.
But one cestume that designer Edith
Head did not whip up for Dorothy
in this film was Uje costume she
j wears for one of the most impor-
tant scenes.
It is a bedspread: a plain, ordi-
nary, everyday bedspread.
"I guess I crowded too soon,”
troaned the dark-haired actress as
she wrapped herself in several square
yards of the stuff. There wasn’t
even a bit of fringe on It either.
The spread comes into her life
before she gets a chance to put on
the glamour clothes Miss Head
designed
A bar of light, at first only a i "You won’t have
streak, fell across the room, then | zef. He is In good ha
the streak widened as a door to the "_No, I must have
rear from whence the light came ..Would h
quietly opened. would you ta.e h
; and from Madame Bn
But there was a scraping of chairs.! HumPh "
» shuffling of feet and a stretch- j Jozef, may I <
lng of necks as the audience sought your home in my
to determine the cause of the dls- I “—Eh?"
turbance. j "My carriage, Jozef,
Madame Bond was in the door-1 el said solicitously,
way. In her hands was a lighted ! “—Why, yes. thanl
candelabrum. Bhe came into the Thank you very much.'
room, down the center aisle.
I
(To Be Contti
Raco horae.s no longer are coming down
fit retch unless it s in the form of horse meat.
By United Press
|/\ki«ahoma city
honiG cial)—Animnsiti
One war-time
War Ronds!
price we can’t kick about is that
Feb. 27— (Spe-
cial' Animosities from defeat
jof articles of Impeachment against
: Stale Superintendent A. L. Crable
on
ffW Z2Z££. 7U'
and seek to tag, you’re hit!
Down Memory Lane
!i
Feb. 27, 1920
County Agent Felix K. West was a business
in Oklahoma City yesterday.
The concrete foundation for the new ice storage
house that the Trulock Ice company now is building is be-,meBSUre-
ing put in rapidly and as soon as this is done the sec-
tional house will be erected thereon. The house will have
capacity of .3,000 tons. The Trulock company will spend
n° -their P'ant thi" wintpr riKM around
$35,000, which will insure a bountiful supply of ice for
rJ Reno and Canadian county.
^ Recent meeting in this city of group No. 2
P,‘h'r0-hlom* Bankerf association, Earl Morris of the „lon
Commercial hank was selected as secretary of the group. j£tch
and a resolution to remove Dr. Hen-
ry G. Bennett as president of Ok-
lahoma A. and M college lingered
throughout last week.
Administration leaders had a dif-
ficult time mustering sufficient votes
---— j to attacli the emergency clause to
' any measure, however Insignificant.
| There was an Indication that a
! bill to create a state surplus proper-
ty agency—dubbed by some antl-ad-
i ministration spokesmen as the
. | "France Paris bill"-mlght be slde-
Visitor trucked Administration leaders In
jtlic house said the governor was
"very anxious” for passage of the
r-vst> . .... ' acsl8"ea' As the story goes, her
r i H supposing the order does succeed in diverting cloth not luggage has been stolen leaving her
needed by the armed services from more expensive clothing into witli nothing hut th« rinth.. „„ t.*.
the less expensive lines. Suppose the little woman goes into a shop
with six dollars, intending to buy a house dress at $5.98 and keep the
change. But the clerk says, sorry, we don’t hove any at $5.98. All
we have are at $1 98. Okay, says the babe, I’ll take three.
Isn t that disguised inflation, and doesn’t it defeat the purposes
of the orders?
Realizing that their orders may have bugs of this kind hidden
yn,r W,PB n"d OPA have both said that if the orders the pnrt of the scenarist to Intro-
7 rh:,n«ed- This is big-hearted of the-.n and it duce the heroine In such a deglam-
mnkes sense. If the orders arc unenforceable and result in a clothing j orjz«>d state but that's fh»
until later, as the story of Interna-
with nothing but the clothes on her
back She goes to sleep In her slip
and when she lias an unexpected
caller there Is only time to draw
the spread around her curves.
The visitor is handsome Patric
Knowles. It wns a nasty trick on
l»r>4
FDR MAY WRITE-IN
CAMBRIDGE, Maas. — ru.pj —
President Roosevelt hints tint he
will be a candidate for the Pulit-
zer prize in 1954. I na letter to
the secretary of Ills Harvard class,
he wrote: "I have deferred ser-
ious writing until after the class
of 1904 has had Its 50th reunion.
I may have more leisure time
then."
COW
PLAYS 'CHINA SHOP’
WORLAND, Wyo.— (U.R)— Talk
about turning a bull loose
china shop. A
loose In the sales ring at
recently and: (1) tossed one man
tional intrigue In and out of Mexico
develops.
uun muse in a I Imagine, she wailed, "a lady
cow was turned trying to look glamorous done up In
Worland a b*d spread, particularly the first
1 thing In trie morning.”
over a gate; .2 slightly injured Mr. Knowles, rising to the occa-
another man: (3) tore through a|sion as any gentleman would, re-
gate in the ring and Into a lunch '
room, taking the door and hinges
The playing continued. But all
eyes were on Madame Sand as she
made her way to the piano plat-
form—quietly, silently, slowly, the
candelabrum lighting her way.
As she approached the dais it
wns apparent that two persons not
one. Were on the stage—and the
person standing alongside the piano,
not touching it, was—Fran* Liszt.
Chopin was playing.
Frederic finished the Etude with
a great flourish/
Silence. The final note brought
no applause, not a sound.
But the silence was "brief. The
audience, recovering from its as-
tonishment. rose as one person—
rowed, shouted, clapped, yelled and
clambered, and —Jozef Eisner cried
•ftravo! Bravo!*’
The critic Kalkbrenner was
speechless. Louise Pleyel was
speechless. They exchanged glances,
they stared, and. yes. they gulped.
Kalkbrenner and Louis Pleyel to-
gether.
Frederic, pleased, eager, confi-
dent. shook hands with Liszt, bon-
ed to Madame Sand, while the au*
dlenee continued to roar its ap-
proval.
Alfred de Musset, taking no pnrt
in the applause, buried his face in
his hands.
Franz Liszt waited fot the ap-
plause to subside. "Ladles and gen-
tlemen—’’ They were si 111 clapping.
“Ladies and gentlemen—"
"Sh—Liszt is speaking.”
"—Ladles and gentlemen, per-
mit me—Frederic Chopin—'’
* * *
Louis Pleyel sought out Jozef Eis-
ner.
"—My dear Professor Eisner—’’
"Yes. Louis?"
“—There is a matter—a little mat-
ter—”
'—A business matter,
Lesson in E
WORD8 OFTEN \
not say. "When I eni
room, they were then
Say, “When I entere
Enter means to go ini
OFTEN MISPRONC
hospitable. Accent se
not the third.
OFTEN MIS8PEU
one r. Abhorrence: ten
SYNONYM8: Venei
ence. awe, adoration,
WORD STUDY: "
three times and it is j
Increase our vocabular
lng one word each
word: EXULT; to be lr
rejoice exceedingly,
exulted at the news c
success.”
Look and I
1. Is the populatlo
still decreasing?
2. About how man
there in the Vatican li
3. Where does Span!
in the U. 8 ?
4. From what count)
the world's rubles cor
5. When and where
cafeteria opened?
ANSWER!
1. FYance Is lostng pc
Idly because of the lo
The deficiency In popul
to the disappearance
a town of 40,000 lnhab
2. About 1.300.
3. From Texas to Fli
eastern Virginia.
4. Burma.
5. The first cafeteria
Louis? I in 1895 in Chicago, Bl
along.
assured her:
Dottle, you would look beautiful
Sally’s Sallies
Private Breger Abroad
■ even tf you had worn the blnnkets
and mattress, too."
By WIMa
By Dave Hrrger
Administration critics predicted
the governor would appoint France
Paris, a highway commission mem-
ber. as the surplus preperty agent
at a $0,000 annual salary If the
measure Is enacted.
The federal civil service commis-
sion last fall ordered Pnrris' re-
slon last fall ordered Paris' re-
sion for violation of the federal
clean politics" act. Al-
though the state appealed the civil
service board's order to U. 8. dis-
trict court at Tulsa, the federal gov-
ernment is reported withholding
P3L
(Oklahoma.
Feb. 27, 1936
H. E. Wrinkle, superintendent, represented the Ei
Reno public school system at a meeting of tenchers, , . -- ---------- -------
board members and patrons with Governor E W Mar- ll^c? nns' annual salary-°r tio.-
lands education committee in Oklahoma City Tuesday, 'okuumm" hl8hW"y ,und *"""
Mrs. J. L. Trevathan, 312 East London street and) * * *
a B ake’ An*ele». Calif., transacted I Tampers have been on edge in
business in Norman Wednesday. 11 both chambers m recent weeks
H. H. Deskins of Ardmore was an overnight guest *1,7 57.7 and Bennett stacks
Tuesday of Mrs. Deskins’ parents, Mr.and Mrs 'cJorge ^ .pMt
61,5 So.uth E"!80nT avenue- He was accompanied
home by his daughter. Miss Irene, who has spent the past
several days with her grandparent*.
,aB?b tRre°n if"Hcine Park i8 8P®nding a few
Siy“.rSS.Mr-and w a
ting the house into fairly well de
fined factions.
The senate, however, ha* not been
faced with such controversial sub-
ject* but there have been s few
bitter verbal clashes in the opptr
chamber during the last week or
M.
Problem a Day
%
A speaker on the platform has
a number of circulars to distribute
| to the audience. The people come
to him in groups of 8. 9. 10. and 12.
i In any case, he Win have 8 pamph-
lets left. How many circulars has
! he?
ANSWER
I 366. Explanation—Find the least
common multiply of 8. 9. 10, and
; 12; add 8.
V :......J
Easter Pageant
Theme Selected
<
HoUo, Signal Corps? I tract to make a complaint about
Ototoi HaatoOm cwtowwM*
, LAWTON. Feb. 97 —<IM9— “The
Crusaders' Peace of IMS” will be
f the theme of Lawton’* Easter pag-
i Rant, to be given tbh jeer foe the
i 20th straight year.
The pageant will to performed
Apr. l at the Holy Olty tn the
Wichita mountains. Rev. A. M. tool-
lock, founder end director, has an-
nounced. Performances have boon
g-tven at tort 0111 the tost two years
Instead of at the Holy City site
WtOoct's Hr* tor-----
pwtetited b«d
I, rights reserved ’
ywi Utot «ie i**i|ft ft* this cake out of the book
'MfrPeeny Htrht. It never should havi been in i
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Dyer, Ray J. The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 53, No. 309, Ed. 1 Tuesday, February 27, 1945, newspaper, February 27, 1945; El Reno, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc924472/m1/4/: accessed March 28, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.