The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 63, No. 174, Ed. 1 Monday, September 20, 1954 Page: 4 of 6
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Four
El Reno (Okla.) Daily Tribune
Monday, September 20, 1954
The El Reno Daily Tribune phoen,x
A HIm Ribbon Newspaper Nerving » Hlne Ribbon C’«
Issued Dnily except Saturday from 201 North Rock Island Arenue,
and entered aa second-class mall matter under the act of March I, 1471
%
CbrM'
Mr. Rrejfer
By Dave Rregerl
RAT I. DYRR
Editor and rnbllaker
DEAN WARD LEO D. WARD
Basilicas Mana<er Managing Editor
IIARKV 8CHROEDER
Ctreulatlon and Office Manager
MEMBER OE THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Associated Press la entitled exclusively to the use for republicstlon
of aU the local new* printed In this newspaper, as well as all (F) news
OR patches. _
EDITOR'S NOT E: Expression*
and opinions In today's column
are those of the wetter and not
necessarily those of The Tribune's
“sports scribe.”—EDW.
fHAT kind of sports reporter
MEMBER
OKLAHOMA PRESS
ASSOCIATION
MEMBER
KOUTHERN NEWSPAPER
PUBLISHERS ASS'N
\
1HN«^Br
DAILT
SUBSCRIPTION
BT CARRIER
3ne week---—
One Month----------
RATES BT
MAIL IN CANADIAN AND
ADJOINING COUNTIES
| 25 Three Months-------------M W
I MO Six Moiuha-----------------PJI«
One Year WOO One Year. MAS
Us< * here In State-One Year MAO-Out of State----W 00
{
NOBEtreK
Including Seles Tax
Mill
7\
Mondat. September JO. I*M
"* AU lInns' come of thee, and of thine own have we given thee —
I l hron JO: II. Not only the fertile Held* and plenteous rain*. lrea*uree
of minerals and plants and animal life, but the wisdom to use them
come from Ood Morality also yields i. reward for follow ini: Oode laws.
cN.
Is Maine A Trend?
rpilR Democrats have a riifht to derive eonslderahle com-
A
lull. ,.t Ir.i t t«*m|M.rarily, from the election returns in
Maine.
The most significant result was the election of a Demo-
cratic governor, Edmund Muskie, for the first time in
years. He won by a 30.000-vote margin, defying the tradi-
tion that usually gives any GOP governor in Maine a second
term.
Th«- Democratic swell did not engulf congressional can-
didates on the Republican ticket, though they won by much
smaller majorities than had been anticipated.
For example, Sen, Margaret Chase Smith, able supporter
of President Eisenhower and long-time favorite in Maine,
regained her seat by 4<UNMl votes or more. Six years ago,
making her first try for the Senate, she wallo|s-<l the Demo-
cratic nominee by 159,000 to 64,ihhi,
to
s
J
Happy A* California Loses?"
I don't care If you are delirious,
ecstatic, frenzied or pleased be-
yond word* It doesn't speak well
for one's character to rejoice at
another's loss. Gloating indicates
a smallness of caliber which Is
extremely distasteful to the right
kind of people and hard to excuse
In one of whom they are other-
wise genuinely fond.
Winning the first game of the
season must have pleased all
Oklahomans except those who sold
the team short and had a large
amount of guldos wagered on Cali-
fornia. It has a terrific psycholog-
ical effect on the players, the peo-
ple who fill the alodium* and the
rocking chair brigade to which I
am a reasonably new convert.
I aft |vA4. Kmg Itrtw*** ty4hl«M In. . IteUTTdTiTbrtgJ^
>«V-c try**'
<r.
r‘ s. ,
VA
S/
U
\
Bitter Sage
Copyright IM4 by Ersak (inkff.
Distributed bv NEA service, lac.
II |r stumiuril stuff. «»f couprp, fur » winning party
* ascrilM* it* triumphs to the popularity of it* national
leadent ami its* program, and for a losing |>arty to nay the
matter turned on “local issues." Naturally enough, the GOP
blames (Jov. Burton M. ('nuts’ defeat on just such causes.
Possibly the leaders are correct. A good many ! r, ,T'*straiegmygr. emt-
local factors arc diciaive. For instance, in 1952, with a C»t)l
By Frank Gruber
XXXVI
ONO KONO SMITH walked In
Irani At his left were Manny
leas, the cheap, ntckel-plsied re-
tide running aild Mr. Eisenhower sweeping, n Demc*crnt ¥a|^er rolU|ll(lluU1 lM ,u iiobter
broke into rock-ribUHi Republican Kansas and won a con-
gressional seat. Local issues were hot.
Furthermore, exjierience has taught that it is dangerous
to try to see a trend in lutrticnlar elections. What happens
in s|»ecial or early elections is not always confirmed in gen-
eral Iwlloting in Xovemlier.
in land the quartet came the Trxs*
! n.' i
flunk Oorey rame n round the
,Mdr of IIir jail, saw Tainted and
1 slopped
Tancred said. 1 thought you
I mlrht miss It. Oorey ''
\'l VERTH1 LESS, thi ...... that Dem.K'ratic vic-
^ " tory in the highest office in Maine, plus much reduced ,,r *<«Hni u> back sway, but
GOP margins for the Senate and House, cannot really bring *u,tl,r'' h‘n\ 8U,“I *"
gtsnl cheer to the Republicans in their private hearts. m," rugger -
These results are clearly unusual. They miiv not fore- gianand B brier moment
cast the November outcome, but they could. Publicly the -| M |UII, liul back way -
GOP will minimize. but if they do not worry after reading
the Maine returns they are not human.
Something obviously is disturbing a g.nnl many Maine
citixen* who normally vote Republican, and any party |x»h-
tical expert worth his salt—whether Republican or Demo-
crat-will want to find out what it is and what bearing it
may have on November.
The Republican fear that the condition may Ite national,
and the IVmoorat hope that it is. are the sort of ingredi-
ents that make |iolitica so tantalizing a business.
(hoiiaand
Tancred turned on Chuck Oorey
The ex-marshel stood, hu mouth
wide open In fright, hi* hand frown,
halfway to his gun.
Go ahead. Oorey!'* mapped
Tancred.
But Oorey could not move.
A teacher s|utnked a little first-grade girl lavause she
fell asb'ep at her desk the first day of school. We’ll bet
she isn’t a mother.
The average man has no head for figures, says a pro-
fessor. Two eyes arc enough.
We prefer to dodge restaurants where you can read the
menu uii the waiter’s cuat front.
' Bo ten
price!"
No. said Klnnalrd "It warn'*
tlir money."
Never mind. tU> too late"
He took another backward »tep
and Krmiainl moved out of the
doorway, across from Tanrrrd A
Urban leet away Hmv: Run; Bmlth
•.lopped "Your hall hour's up.' hr
growled.
Oil Packard. Prosecutor Gloss-
man. Judge Kraft and the other
I men who had railed on Tancred
J a half hour ago. came around the |
lomer and sbirted acToa* the street.
Without looking at them. Tan-
red said, sharply. "Krep out of |
| this Its my right "
Eric Btrwiemeyer pointed “la
that the cun with which you killed
Ham Older?" Hi* voice wwa a taunt
“In spite of his faults." Tancred
A woman makes up her mind through what she decides ] said, taking it up. Sam okl*.-
on right after her final decision. never adud for the odds
- | Stung. Btratemryer sneered
Driving too fa*t is what speeds uii the accidents that Have Helm «ald. suddenly thickly,
overtake people.
Working to forget gets a |»erson lots farther than for-
getting to work.
up the accidents that
‘Hong Kou I didn't bargain lor
this ' Mr look a quick step forward,
madr a half turn to fare I hr Trxoa
men “111 kill the first man who
make* a n*ove . . ."
dull sneer ins. Hirutemeyer * hand
•treakid few hi* gun.
Hr wo* lati. -terribly fast, yet
nine years as« Tancred would have
Uealen him airatrmeyrt a gun waa
In hi* hand, apouting flamr and
lead, when Tancred * catnc up
It was the sjired of Ihr draw
bimI the fast triggering that wwa
^ ~ neceaaary to a prof mb tuna I gun-
( alumet, has la-cn chosen as a member of the glee club at pghlw c( gtrairmryer* caliber
Down Memory Lane
1ft.1l
Sept. 20.
ROBERT EVANS, El Rents and Neal Lyon, Geary, are a-
mong tbe 62 students who have lioeii selectetl for mem-
bership in the 1'niversity of Oklahoma men’s glee club. It
was announced today from Norman, and Miss Pauline Crump,
Then • Jacob Pugger hurtled out
from between the Jail and the ad-
joining building. Tltrie aa* n gun In
hia hand. Hla eyes, the eyee of a
madman, were straight ahead.
And gtralght ahead of him, hU
bock turned to Puggrr, wax Dave
Helm
Fug go pulled the trigger Tsr.-
cred saw the bullet fill Heim, hur'
hire forward to his kure* Hr tun.
ed hi* gun on Tugger, out held hi*
fire.
Bio*ly. with great effort and
agun. on hu lace. Dave Helm
tatsted around. Hu gun rame up—
thundered Pugger let out a scream
and hit the earth.
Helm's tortured ryri met Tan-
cred's arrom the dbtanre
' Ooodby, Weal he choked HrlmY
r>es glased and he fell forward an
t.ts fare.
Not otie of the Texas men drew
a gun Dave Helm* defection had
stopped them. Or. prrhapa. ih--y
mere men. like Hebu. alio didn't
like the adds-If they were against
tlir other man.
• e a
fltANCRFI) cocked hi* head to
1 one aide and watched oil
Parki rd come slowly forward
“ttk over" laid Tancred.
HU eyee went beyond the Texas
men. up the street. Far away, past
Pugger * Blare, he saw a aalftly
running figure, a girl Behind her.
■I the depot, was the morning train
from the east. Hr thrust the re-
volver under hi* waistband aitd
look off the marshals badge that
tie tud pinned on less than s half
Lour ago.
“I won't need tht* any more." he
*ald He tamed It to Oil Packard.
Tancred waa walking down the
• 'Heel, toward Laura Vesser. who
' waa romlnr from tire train towar 1
! him
They met 10 feet from the door
of the Texas Saloon Lily Leeds,
standing in the open doorway, look-
ed at them for a moment, then
turned and went Into tire saloon
THE END
Look and Learn
year In
1 What waa the ret
the U H for but ha?
2. What U claimed to be the
Mnmgrst thing In nature for !U
sue and weight?
2. What American president
coined the phrase, the strenuous
Ufe?'
4 How many parts are there in
a watch?
ft What bird grows a* high os
eight feet?
ANSWER*
In 1961. there were more than
3900000 babies bom In the U H
2 A bird's feather
2. Theodore Roosevelt
4 An everyday wrist watch com-
prise* about I2S parts
5 Ostrich
A M a long way from what might
•-w be called an enthusiast but
grow tolerant with the year*, now
that the game can be seen with-
out fighting the traffic, bring
pushed and shoved by the crowd,
und being able to krep my folded
up position without g«w yelling
maniac rising up directly In front
of me at the beginning of the
game and continuing to bob up
and down every time the cheering
section goes Into action. The mob
psychology which causes the ma-
jority of Individual* to rise and
fall In unison la another queer
subject and has nothing what so’
Ur do with gloating.
A poor loser la a pitiful sight to
behold but a poor winner la the
lowest form of animal life. None
of this la-de-da. happy-for-you
Polly Anna stuff. It Isnt worth
while winning from some one who
doesn't rare If he loam, but the
rompettmc who tells hla opponent
he b glad to lose b lying In hb
teeth and the truth Isn't In him.
We all want to win but can grace-
fully accept our losses; It b pros-
perity which sometime* causes us
to go back on our traditional
rearing.
While on the Held of sport* the
El Reno Country club women are
off and swinging today aa they
qualify for their club champion-
ship tournament Oolf Isn't the
gladiatorial combat that football
Is. but does require skill, a con-
trolled temper and considerable
endurance Thb year's contest
look* like a fair field and no fa-
vors and a new champion may be
crowned.
NEA
By PETER EDSON
Washington Correspondent
Asian Defense Pact Only Papi
Until Ratification Is Complete!
ITf A.SHINQTON — I NEA) - The. open for the ndmbstasi of new
southeast Asia collective de-
fense treaty signed by representa-
tive* of right nations at Manila b
only another piece of paper till It
b ratified by the congresses or
parliament* of at least five of the
member governments.
For the United States, thb could
be done at the reconvened session
of the U. 8. arneie which will con-
sider the censure motion* against
Senator McCarthy Bui the general
expectation b that the treaty wont
be sent to the U 8 senate for rall-
I lent ion until the full congress re-
convene* next January. That mean*
hearings and probably no ratifica-
tion before February at the earliest
Thb doe* not mean that aU action
to make the treaty effective will be
blocked for that long. Some pre-
liminary planning can be done be-
fore ratification and creation of the
new council.
Political
Announcements
her* as (hey wake up to the thrl
of Com in uniat aggression in Sou)
east Asia
It b notable that the new ti
extend* lb theoretical U not
real protection! to the time Ii
china states of southern VI
Loos and Cambodia By the trrl
of the Oeneva armistice agrretnJ
Vietnam b burred from Joining 1
Southeast Asia alliance now. lJ
and Cambodia might br admittj
technically, but there will probal
be no Immediate move to take thj
tn.
Problem a Day
The Tribune has been authorised
to announce the following candi-
date* for elective office*, subject to
I the general election on Nov. 2.
Democratic Ticket
Pee Male He a a lor:
JIM A. RINEHART
Pee »Ute Representative:
JEAN L. PAZOURECK
Per IMatrtet Judge:
WILLIAM L. FOGG
Oklnhomii (’nUt-pe for Women, it him rr|Mirttnl from Chlckn- ltw, )lMn Mr .),*% Iut he
"ft*- fired fact, but Ida aim waa not
Mis* Eleanor Henderson of Tulsa, a former memlier of true mouth He counted entirety
th<* El Reno hiirhochonl faculty, visited with friends here' an hb speed Hb first bullet mia*ed
Wednesday. Tancred by » hair'* breadth and hi*
Major Lkiyd Kwen of Kan Antonio, Tex., formerly station- •e*'""*1 Utrough Teoctvd-s
ed at Fort Reno, durinp which time hr held the rank of Jj" ««•*«* ,u» •*‘,n
captain, has hern transferred to Hawaii for duty with the Thw* »*• ne Uibd bullet, tor Ton-
arnn there, friend* I., r. !,.,** learned.
Mm. J. K. Jones. IMHl South ('Ixa'taw', returned Wednes-
day from Oklahoma (’ity, where *he hud Mient several day*
Fruits and Flowers
Two partners In bunities* agree
to divide their profit* of li.290 so
lhal A shall receive 30 pujrnl more
than B What are their shares?
*N*Wfc*
A UJH. B 2JOO Let X equal p,r Ceuaty lodge:
Bs share and *JN mnus X equal 8AM T. ROBERSON
At share Form equation X equal* ___
5.380 mum* X mnus 0 2oX Solve Oavy naifi
-1 TINY R0YSE
Answer to Previous Puixla
THE IDEA in TO HAVE a perma-
nent council in session at all Unir-
to keep an eye on developments in
Southeast Asia No location for per-
manent headquarter* has been de-
rided upon
The Philippine government ho*
been designated aa depository for
ratifications of the treaty Manila
has therefore figured prominently in
speculation on where the BEATO will
slL Honolulu or Singapore, with
lheir big military bases, are other
paoatblluies.
There b a great temptation to aay
that HEATO b a Pacific counterpart
to NATO, but that b considered an
exaggeration BEATO ha* no mili-
tary fort* of Its own. such as NATO
ho* BEATO b a far weaker organi-
sation than NATO waa when It was
created five years ago At beat.
HEATO may be considered a thud
cautious step towards the creation
of a NATO-IUte organisation in the
Pacific The first step was the U S -
Philippine mutual defense agree-
ment made at the end of World war
II. The second step was the ANZU8
i Australia-New Zeoland-US.I peel
made Ut connection with tbe Japa-
nese peace treaty negotiation* for
mutual defense against any new ag-
gress Ian* in the Pacific
WHAT THIS SEEMS to add uj;
b that U. 8. Secretary of State J<
Poster Dulles no*' hwa the “uni
action" agreement on South*
Asia that he tried to get out of I]
British and French before the (u
neva conference. I
There ore of course three otnj
alliances to back HEATO up IN
ever get* In Double These ore f.
U. 8 mutual defense alliances r
Pot muss. Japan und Karra.
What the HEATO alliance n t
need* to br really effective Is i J
port from India. Burma and Ir (
nests They all wont to be naum
now When the Communbt pr**»y
against them begtna to get
and they wakr up. they may
their minds But few people
expect that as sir immediate dr
o|»n« ni ?
Short Stories''
About Home Folk),
M 111'}
r of 1
Mr* O K MrMurry of
vUle. b a guest in the home of
*on-ln-bw and daughter. Mr
Mr* L W While, fill West
ran.
Mrs J Y Taylor. 1300 South
and daughter. Mia* Marian Tsjl
of Oklahoma City relumed Hall
day from a t so-week vacation I
Gregory. Tex, where they wl
gur*ts ol Mr* Taylac * *i*ter-kn-ll
Mu* Msrtoy Taylor. I
At EOS*
1 American
Deeuty —
S Scckel -
•-applet
IS Give forth
t mm vrarnniimu t iiy, w nr I o she liutl Himnl Nevrrnl tl
vigitinx her oana, Roy «ntl ('lyric* Jones nnn thnir wive*.
Kept. 2«. IftM
\|ll ,nV> B COPE "I El RtHkO ItMM linrn rlrctrcl thnirnutn
* • . . f I l*aa Ss i * t It Aim* flgla
of the nlxth Hlatrirt Drmocrntir ccimmlttrc*. R wnn sn-
noiimml todnv, with Mrs. B. 0. Bur thnm of ( snton nntruil
to wrvo an vice chnlrnutn. Mrs. Gladys l*nyni\ Duncan, was
rptainnd as sveretary-traasurer of lhc< committee*.
Etta DrI# Barent-Teiicher association held ita flmt
meetina of the year Turstiny at the school with Mr*. E. A.
(’ox. vice president, presiding over the business session. The
ireaident’s message was read by Mrs. Roiiert Stevenson.
ii'
the eye*.
Tsnrred made hb half-swivel,
caught Kittnaird with hb gun clear-
ing the hob let Kinnalrd In that
last Instant of hi* Me saw hb fate
and started lo cry out. TancretTi
bullet rlinked it oft
see
■JADPENDINO went for hb nun
Is a fraction of an Inatsnt alter
•tratemeyer. but he never quit* got
hb gun out Dave Helm s bullet
naught him In the stomach and
Mar (tending fuided forward
Hung Kang Bmlth waa auddenly
paralysed Mb hand* went half-way
5# Eire rest Jug
•<) race
• 1 Chair
DOWN
1 Remainder
2 Hebrew
mesiure
2 Fodder pit
4 Warehouse
ft BscUmation
of dlaguit
ft Evoke
7 Indian nurge
• Rajah'i wife
ft Place
___ differently
20 Needl* cate *• wgl#
2) Organ of D Deceased
hearing »• Methane
14 Banana-eaung hydrocarbon
isieiN’1
ri
appellation
14 Itafort
It Perutning to
V’, 'U| I". *. <* J W
TW i iK 1 ]51 fti (k'aiili
IS ~
Poe Co
m
wx
I? Literary
fragments
» Plgure of
speech
Ift AppUudetf
M C nnsumed
21 Beneath
24 Region
25 Hang
24 Settle
4J Sets of card*
45 Food regime*
4* Girl's name
47 Individual*
41 Flower part
M Century pbnt
20 I’siinea >1 Irish colleen**
21 Skin disorder name
22 Went astray 52 Allowance
2ft Staircase parts for waste
40 Take on ftft Bile
DbL No. Il
RAY T?CH
I Hat. ftl
GEORGE E. HURST
roe t'smibatsarT DbL No. •
W. R. “BILL" M A BERRY
Poe Teart Clark i
FRANK TAYIXJR
Republican Ticket
Pee Ceeely Sbertrii
DENNIS ADAMS
•ter (Vert Ctrrki
T. M. “TED" HENRICH8EN
Per Oe—fttetebie. dm. Me. fti
C. E. FUELING
IN CONNFtTION WITH thb
ANZU8 pact (here have been e
number of secret five-power military
conferences -including France and
Oreel Britain at MUvgapor* and
Washington The machinery set up
tor these five-power operations b
now capable of ex pen* Ion to Include
the three other HEATO charter
mooterr* Pekbtan. the PhlUpptnes
and Thailand
Thb organisation obviously ha*
great gap* m It But the way b left
Mr and Mr* Grant Barber.
South Birttfard and Mrs A
Hauarr. 717 South Roberto, vti
Sunday with Mr and Mrs 1
•ocher In Norman l-n lUthctJ
the son of Mr aitd Mr*. Or
•ocher
Tommy Moure, son ol Mr J
Mrs J. D Moore. 1144 Itouth l|
comb, mho has been s patient!
the school hospital uf the UnlveM
of Oklahoma in Norman, b IT
ponvBlearing at hb haxne
Sally's Salliow
Hv Scott
17 Intocb
211'olynegUa
(loth
12 Trtntmll
>4 Dinner
course
17 Ttewn oe Um
•hint
Ift Jewlth
39 neoiib
41 Compagg
pv. Everett I’nrfle. |»n*tor of the First I'reahyterian rhurrh, “•» *» "Dwri shaak-
Irtl devotkina.
Mra. J. L. Trev athnn nnd Mrw. IlkyHn Dnvla will lie host-
ean«*a for the lAntie* ({olf ciilh which will meet nt ft «. m.
Tliiirmlky nt the El Reno Golf pn<i Country club.
The Every Women's Bible atmiyclub nirt in the home
of Mi n. W. L. Mm tin, 13.1 North K. Tuesday afternoon with
■even tuettlbera anti one puaat preaoflt.
don’t sheot
Ml* lip* tabled Into a sneer.
Dave Helm stepped forward H»
ilirugi out hb gun eo that tft<
muaab was almost touching Hmlftli
Hr gold. "Thb b the orgy I gair It
le lark* Miller * and pulbd pie
41A flower —
44 Skew vehLle
40 Vnltea motal
44 Laughing
ftl BloniMrd
bird of
14 A debar
17 Division of .
Ruaale
UM
Lesson in English
wtstuH omm miauskd db
net say. "8eversl notary i«rblirs
have their office* In thb building " j
• Notaries public" b the eurreet plu-
i*l _
OFTEN MlRPRONOtWtTCD:
Flaccid Pronounce ftak-atd. e a* 1
I Ui at. accent first syllable
OFTEN MtNM’fEUJg) Therefor
i tor that thine >; no final e. There-
fore icanaequenUyi; observe the
final •
aVNONYMN Irasrble ehnlerb.
splenetic teolv. teehy, MWhf*
cranky, crass
WORD BTUDY "Urn a wind
three limes and It b ymire' let us
liklease our viwabulary by mas-
tering one word each day Today1*
word ANTWIObtNT I adjectival;
going before In time, pr reed I ill
"bound thinking should be ante-
cedent to every invert ment. '
“1 lte«* live Vt liivov Ml f*u AU I Uve lu do UjuuiuIm Ip uigig
X
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Dyer, Ray J. The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 63, No. 174, Ed. 1 Monday, September 20, 1954, newspaper, September 20, 1954; El Reno, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc924926/m1/4/: accessed June 23, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.