The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 59, No. 299, Ed. 1 Wednesday, February 14, 1951 Page: 4 of 6
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^Jj^^ly TfW Horroli! Skating Hasn't BesnSo Goo^or Years
SsStSSS^ /v *S&\
GUvn,
LEO D. WARD
New* EdHer
_ , 7 mrhike or ng associated hum " 1
^ *° “*• »• ** «PuhUtatloo
“*•* nrwt Panted in Uil* newpaper, as well u all AF new*
SOUTHERN NEWSPAPER
-------AM*N
------------- association
*AIL,r Mni BP MAIL m CANADIAN AND*
BY CAMTEB ABIflimMl iWtO—1—m
■! Ulli XIV CANADIAN A1
omw::..—~ j,."S’"”"*®.a
^:;=^^::EErda
Bxdudlnc tete* Tu I
Wednesday, February 14, 1M1
U“™*BT aenitfc briar i»T- Reap hi taae with Uh tai/laile Mv soul
****** be Joyful in the Lord. It shall rejoice In hie salvation—Psa. t6:9.
India Asks for Food
AN unhappy combination of bad weather and natural dig. I
mmm
The^i^ t0 buy 4>00<)’00<) tonH el^where.
Iney seek the remainder from ur on a loan. But our aov-
ernment hae decided it would be better to furnish the iffain
A «°rUttri^ht *?nt 14 W0U,d come t0 about U80.000 000
A state department official already has made a prelim-
inary appeal to the senate foreign relations committee on
bill under Study 6 C°m,hlttec doe'sn,t yet haVe a aid
nSteh thftnnhiSnthe SeP?Je Kroup didn,t be,rin 8ction
mediately, the notion arose that congress was sitting on
r ivjiii me iact mat the senate gr
the^n^inH* n°ti0t." ar°s®,that ........... un
. Stn,ct,y 8lfakln*. this isn’t so. But it is true that
a good many lawmakers nm
F«... ouicwjr speasing, this isn’t so. Bu
a good many lawmakers are cool to the idea.
Chiefly they resent India's undermining
policy by attempts in the united nations to
Ked China almost at the price of surrender
* * *
W IWtfr
/ r»r,AN»
* * *
TS®** f, refIin,f- t0°’ that India’s grain shortage is at
PiSSSmT&uSu l° 'itM !-,U? trade wa'' witb neighlioring
8SS& *? tak(‘ availab'e wheat from
MrelS not to nJl5LhaVe- pl?nted m,u'h new'y reclaimed
£I™ - ^ xssls e:,
,hu' ”m'wh*t ""*■
sfflSS4 s
tstfaur** ■■s.'Xitirwas
1 liVbe'liXTSfai hi- “««* >*-
trja .p -
Crimson Holiday
Bv Jana U^Li *
happen before a lot of hS wonRJ% 14 pruobably WOrt’t
ate chamber by those whr> fooi frfi ^ anK about the sen-
short-sighted both at home aid abroad. **" ***" Woefully
THE STORY: Lavlnia Orouble'*
dralh, when her wheel chair
Plunged Into a ravine, waa murder
—someone sawed the brake. Lisa
Farwell. fiancee of Lavlnla’i old-
est son Court, witnessed the trag-
edy in company with Angus Kent,
“ *•""* lawyer. Uaa saw her
rather. Henry Farwell. who op
P°*ed her engagement to Court,
near the scene, but denies the saw
anyone when questioned by Use
sheriff. Others are questioned, bi-
eludlng Court's brother Andrew,
and iAvtnia't aeretary, Gerl Palmer,
and when the sheriff wrings an
admission from the dead woman’s
sister. Elisabeth Stratton, that she
waa near white the saw waa found.
Henry Farwell admits that he was
the man on the ridge.
* * *
By Jane Holsinger
COPYRIGHT 1961 BY MEA SERVICE, INC.
which sickened her the most the We umr.
i“‘^SLh!.‘« -■w.e SS
.MW uv Itou case suspicion on
her father, or the tone of his voloe
o * *
and^lMps tn° H." JuttHa^ortbS ?** bU,lt hls 0Wn coffin
partment* of "an.v'departmeit store0*"*’ try the notions de-
”"Bt w*tchyout fo* ^hVarm nf tff‘i"^^^01 Now the »irIs
Down Memory Lane
day night at a sIJKh 1 °Ar£‘nl>ed a Cub troop ....
Jges of 9 and 12 ohnae membandd"1! l?Lh''V8 b«tween the
Sco“tm“"-f. wMsSX lmUP’ H'rbert
Improvements are hein« ..
church building, which not onlv wiM ^ First BaPtist
will mark progress of Hip “d tbe unemPloyed but
•aid Saturday members, Rev. H. B. Willhoyte
f• ».mw raaident
other woman in the United States'Ll uh,‘jb on|y one
of supervisor of telephone* fm- tV r d 4o ho,d- 14 is th®t
Charles H for the Fr'»co railroad
lamation Saturday ordering E' Reno’ ,8Sued a Proc*
animals from ronniSg Tirn*40 .restrain "heir
jKth«ll Mach’a’ Oklahoma°AhaandWM “n- ,reallm»» ba«-
L^panrn.C!l “«? Tha apWatCf
■a u started an intensified safetv P01'®* department
vey, disclosed today. Continue/ Ch,ef ^ Har-
Park.ng statutes will mult the double-
nsc&syasS 5**&r *“ ,"a,aad °f
JvJl* »« i«ft»n«edV^r2tSISr ,°f 5 Ren? “id to-
?r2j?ct*.ip Chadian eoontr nhS?hj lmport*n'
Jsst&il&Z* •” ft ss?s
BUT, thought Lisa Farwell sadly,
13 even the gentlest of people
"ome to hate some time in their
lives. It had been Elisabeth Strat-
ion In the shrubbery then. Lisa
mew how that It hod been Elisa-
beth she had seen Just after the
wheel chair had craahed Into the
ravine carrying Lavlnia Farwell to
her death
But Lisa's father! He couldn't
have come to the arena ble house
to take a hand in murder. He had
come only to talk to Elisabeth.
But her father's words kept com-
ing back to Lisa and they folded
around her now like a thick, gray
'eil, suffocating her. He had said:
"I'd glvfc my life . .
Usa began to weep helplessly.
Henry Farwell was saying. "I told
Lavlnia she'd get no place with
her threats against Elisabeth and
'hen I talked to Elisabeth after-
wards. down near the coach house.
I had started home by way of the
ridge when Lavlnia's first scream
sounded. From that distance I
ouldn't tell exactly what It was
nid so I kept on walking."
"You didn't know that Mrs
tenable had been killed then?"
Sheriff Igne asked.
“No. Shortly after I reached
lome Elizabeth telephoned to tell
ne what had happened." Mr. Far-
well sighed and sat down. Then,
ipparently as an afterthought:
Who saw me on the ridge,
heriff?" ^
At first, the silence that drifted
tcross the room was meaningless
te Lisa. At length she felt, rather
'han saw, the heads turning
^ward her. She gasped. They were
not looking at her. They wen
staring past her.
Court Orenable said thickly. “I
told the sheriff. I had to tell him.
Lisa. I thought . .
But Court couldn't finish when1
he saw the sickness in the eyes of
^ Klrl he had asked to be hls
"YOP accused my father?"
L“«s voice was almost disbelieving
“No! No, Usa. Don't believe that!
X only reported what I saw"
Court's voice was pleading. “Aunt
•ataabeth waa on the back terrace
•nd your father waa on the rldae
IteM the riKriff j« thrt. ?£
1 w«a at home.
tdMtft have an alibi, i had Jun
J*te in the east sM. entrance anc.
B mother* room
when I heard her---
T I8A. remembered well Court hat
. ubeen standing in the archway
to the terrace, expressions of dark
brooding and shock struggling on
hi* handsome face. She remem
bered hls gase toward the ridge.
Now she knew why Angus Kent
had tried to warn her.
2tow could vouf" she whispered.
Sheriff Lane drew a deep breath,
rubbed hls face and looked at
Angus who drew a piece of paper
from hls pocket and handed It to
th# sheriff wordlessly.
Lisa was too confused at the
moment to wonder too much over
that silent exchange and Une's
next approach began before she
had time to try to sort out her
Jumbled emotions.
The sheriff now began addressing
Marlon Carson for the first time
Mrs. Carson." he asked, "you
anti your husband live In New
York?"
Marion Carson, the daughter of
the murdered woman, took a few
moments to adjust herself.
"Yes," she said smoothly. “You
Both of us were tired after our
trip from New York. The night
Mnth!,Wl *!a<1 trled 10 vWt wlth
Mother, but she wes, as usual
quarrelsome."
r i.1. «!L fe* mor* thought
Usa Farwell, Marion Carson would
resemble her mother.
Then Marlon continued: “We had
decided to leave early, and we were
packing when the—screams—came.”
* * *
Qheriff lane dug hls hands
Into his pockets a little more
---- ““'WHiiy. XOU — — ^ most or
already know, from what my' “on.” he answered
. ,, ........ wiim my
brother Andrew has told you that
this whole so-called holiday at
home was a farce. Phillip, my hus-
band, and I have never been on
what might be called friendly terms
with my mother. But we certainly
didn't kill her."
"Where were you when . >
when It happened?’ the sheriff
asked.
“Upstairs in the guest bedroom.
stirs
are planning to run for the Senate
rext spring, Mr. Carson.”
*p/,1™' ^le flush rose first
In Phillip Carson's neck. It spread
aCkhid ,faC*' He gIanced with
a kind of tortured disbelief in hls
eyes toward hls wife.
™ C°urt •>“ tell you that?”
Phillips Camn demanded.
The sheriff smiled now.
l*aVe a more authoritative
eource for most of our lnforma-
|N a large and weighty tome
• entitled "Oemalogy and "log
riJPjjy * Oklahoma.'' published
»y we Chapman Publishing com-
PMy. March 1801, in Chicago and
bearing the dedicatory lines.
Commemorating the achieve
clUaens who have con
^touted to the progress of Okla-
homa amt the development of Its
1 Wnd the pictures of
well-known individuals.
Names well-known through news-
paper* and historical data but
face* unfamiliar and forgotten.
These pictures are a riot. The
,.y.to ot Major Gordon W.
UUle "Pawnee BUI" who was the
ongest survivor of the leaden of
the original Oklahoma Boomers.
In thia photograph Pawnee Bill
has long hair streaming over hls
shoulders and a handle-bar mus-
tache that la a Jim-dandy.
*,nder the anomalous heading
,.Ctlaf^Cter of th* Population.” I
find these lines, "There is no por-
tion of the union which boasts
a higher grade of citizens than
does Oklahoma. Americans pre-
dominate, although there are a
goodly number of foreigners whose
citizenship brings to the territory
Scotch thrift, German persever-
ance, Irish adaptability and Eng-
lish determination.”
At the date of this compilation
the author quote* the Honorable
Dennis *. Flynn, “Ariiona has
one convict to each 435 of popu-
lation; Oklahoma has one to each
2.150 and Arizona Is regarded as
law abiding." I
Dennis Flynn lived in this area '
when it was considered unquali-
fied to become a state. To be sure
It had a great many natural ad-
vantages but those of us who lived
here were thought to be border
ruffians and our cities were such
dens of iniquities that self gov-
ernment was out of the qumtlon
In this regard Mr. Flynn says.
"There are more illiterate* in
Massachusetts than in Oklahoma,
two to one. and that count takes
In Boston.”
Dennis was satisfied with what
was then known as law-and-order.
I wonder what he would think to-
day with cattle rustling done with
pick-up trucks, instead ef cow-
ponies and representative of the
law-and-order being kidnap,^
He would probably be a little be-
wildered.
ft ft*
“My wife’g the old-fa*hioned kind
★WASHINGTON CQII Hull
__________
srwa BMON
NKA Washington Correspondent
— correspondent
Closing 'Them Tax Loophol
Would Bring Half a Billion
Y/ASHlNtJTON. F#»h ii_iktca >
Yukon
In an even
(To Be Continued)
Rev. Cllffora Sampler, pastor,
said' the church bought the Me
as a sight for a new church build-
ing. The Pentecostal church par-
sonage Joins the new church prop-
erty on the west. Building plans
are indefinite at present.
Mrs. Curtis Line was leader of
the program Friday afternoon at
the First Christian church when
they observed the World Day of
Prayer. Mrs. Gamer Noland and
Mrs. Howard Prank gave talks.
Twenty-five ladles attended.
Joe Wadell, Jr., has enlisted in
the army and reported to Port
Bragg. N. C., for 14 months in-
fantry basic training. He was a
student of Yukon highschool.
Bill Thorp Is reported improv-
ing from a recent operation.
rASHINbTON. Feb. 14—(NBA)
. .rChalrman Walter F. George
,th* “nate finance committee
|»»d Chairman Robert L. Dough-
th* ih0U8e way» and means
committee Just happened to come
out of Coolldge auditorium In the
ll.™7 °f confess, together. They
iietenlng to General
J£«ht D. Heenhower make hls
first report on European defenses.
A "Porter who Just happened to
be behind them overheard their
conversation, Joshing each other
»t ran something like this;
a*»u* George
,P°l *°*n» to do anything
ateut that new tax bill on the
senate ride. We'rs going to leave
it all to you.'*
"Oh, you wouldn't want to do
that would you? Why don’t you
w«k out half of it, and let us
work out the other half in the
jteurej" asked Representative
Dough ton.
‘‘Nor said Senator George. "We
wouldn’t want to deprive you of
the pleasure. Besides, you’ll want
to close all them loopholes"
Closing of them loopholes Is
only one of the very tough tax
problems which President Truman
has now tossed to the congress
that th*“ tort**!* he
closed a year ago. Congress par-
tially closed a half-dozen of them
but left the biggest wide open.
Closing them would add an esti-
mated $600 million to government
bers, as yet unsupported
breakdowns on what it Is
ed to buy with this money
__ * * *
rpHE president’s tax i
hints that requests f<
more defense appropriate
be made later on. As the*
plemental requests pile up
will be corresponding reque
supplemental taxes. That’s
the second bite will come ii
if necessary there will be a
bite.
While all this Is called a
as-we-go" tax plan. It woul
haps be more proper to cal
'tax-as-we-go payment plan
What's more, there is a h
the president’s tax message
he would like to have thesa
taxes continued for the du
of the emergency. “During
war II taxes were not
enough," the president told
xress. “As a result ... we
In Inflation for our failure t
enough.”
What that seems to im(
that this la not just
revenue only. It is taxatic
control Inflation and he war
continued as long as there
inflationary pressures.
BEDTIME ALARM
OXFORD. Miss.—4U.R)—U
____ "V —suvcrnmem: | set off the cltv fire alan
venues from higher Income cor- while townsfolk were settlni
Dotations and individuals. for bed. ThTstaS! SST
* * * ‘water tank, sounded for
tries, preferential iMofmaMt — I _
SAME PRICE
Boston8 pn^ho^Awhlehhnem
hw markdown sales, headlined a
bg newspaper display advertise-
ment as follows: Men! Our *145
Cashmere overcoats are now *145
Look and Learn
HORIZONTAL
I Depicted
musical
instrument
10 Oils again
It Age
13 Shop
14 At this time
17 Deposit
15 Foot parti
l»Self
20 Near
21 Artificial
language
22 Cape
25 Reared
>7 Pronoun
21 Exclamation
tetllfaction
20 Behold!
SOAnent
31 Shine
33 Descended
3* Three-toed
■loth
37 Atop
31 Weight
measure
••Royal
45 Follower
Ste'*1-’
4»»*ltered side
• Niton
(symbol)
• Domestic Slavs
11 Dash
13 Grade
13 Monster
U It is played
with ■--
hammer
S3 Storage pit ___
24 Peck 32 Wild beast
*5 It is made of 34 0baerve
graduated 35 Joint of
~—, the leg
25 Zeus’ mother 38 Lack
31 Portal in a 40 Orate
fence 41 German river
Bfcir- ? ^1 7:! if
■ ml
Ss’SJSftwsHE
“•M !fiuigi:iryia i
1. In what little town in Virgin-
ia in 1865 did Lee surrender to
Grant?
2. On what river Is Paris?
3. What Biblical character lied
to Peter regarding the price he
had received for a piece of land,
thereby making his name synony-
mous with liar?
4. What is America’s favorite
kind of pie?
5. Who was the most famous an-
cient Oreek orator?
ANSWERS
1. Appomatox.
2. The Setae.
3. Ananias.
4. Apple pie.
6. Demosthenes.
— — mining__
tries, preferential treatment on I
capital gains, estate and gift tax
exemptions are things that don’t
llgure in the life of the ordinary
citizen. 1
But when the $60-a-week guy I
with a family is being asked to
pay more taxes, it is only fair for
him to know that nobody in the
higher brackets is being exempted
for special privilege. If these loop-
holes are ever closed, this would
appear to be the time to do it.
Otherwise, President Truman’s I
request for a two-bite tax hike is
in the nature of a slick trick. It
is also a confession that the ad-
ministration itself doesn’t know
how much more taxes will be |
asked for eventually.
In other words, the $71 billion I
budget which President Truman |
requested in January is Just a pre-
liminary request. This is evident
in the 540 billion estimate for na-
tional defense expenditures in the
next year, plus another (30 bil-
lion authorization to make con-
- hento Hu
Tbrtable
■for You!
Problem a Day
42 Departed
43 Wiles
44 Hawaiian
wreaths
45 Misfortunes
60 Compass point
51 An (Scot.)
1 nearn Bar scream."
*PP*aliiW to L4*a, half
*«*>«. **»d Uaa dMnt know
52 Lowers
I'jssar*"”
jEF**
A collection of quarters, nickels
and dimes totalR $3.70. If there
are 3 times as many quarters aa
dimes, and 3 more nickels than
dimes, how many of each coin ate
there?
ANSWER
4 dimes, 12 quarters. 6 nickels,
let X equal number of Him— jx
number of quarters, X plus 3 num-
ber of nickels. Multiply the ^
by 0.10, the quarters by 0.35, and
the nickels by 0.05. and form
equation O.lOX plus 0i75X plus
0.06X plus 0.10 equals 3.70. Solve
tor X.
DO YOU HATE
atm
*unt
e— —™. UpMt
Ita8llaa M — _
to rollovo such
S25S2SS23?
*cwn*n'* / w*E
*£SLSfiSiSSSSEtiffiS*
IWW L HNEMMI aS8R
RUSSIAN TAUGHT
MINNEAPOLIS, Minn.— (UJB —
The University of Minnesota high-
school is one of two public hlgh-
seboois to the Uhl ted Stelae which
offers Russian classes. The
school is in nntiand, Ore. The
Minnesota course includes music,
literature, history and eurtosns as
wall aa the Russian language.
*fs A* SmM-Cm
HoriFs Fsitssi
^ ■ l*i MhgMMV4
**» 10» Maker mSi
•0 hen touch lyyiaa *
Toe caa do R
fa«w4 e«d the
fsstional keyboard!
Com Is and tty fcl
HENRY BEN!
JEWELER
ITS COFFEE TIME
Everett Poole Men’s Blbte cL
LADIES’ NIGHT DINNER
* THURSDAY - -. 7 P. M.
75c Per Plate
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Dyer, Ray J. The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 59, No. 299, Ed. 1 Wednesday, February 14, 1951, newspaper, February 14, 1951; El Reno, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc924703/m1/4/: accessed August 15, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.