Sapulpa Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 27, No. 271, Ed. 1 Monday, July 20, 1942 Page: 1 of 6
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• •
UNITED PRESS
The Only
Daily Paper in
Creek County.
Full Leaaed Wire
Service.
JLPAe OrKtTst NEW3PAPER
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H<5tO«'CAfc
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June, 1942
3408
VOL. XXVII. NO. 271.
3APULPA HERALD, SAPULPA, OKLAHOMA MONDAY, JULY 20, 1942.
FOUR DOLLARS A YEAR
WAAC BEGINS
RIGID TRAINING
ROUTINE TODAY
Bundists Held in $10,000 Bail
m
Efforts To Release Some
25,000 Soldiers For
Combat Duty by Next
April.
PORT DE8 MOINES. Iowa. July 20
<U.R>—American women Invaded the
last masculine stronghold of the army
today as they began training that will
release 25.000 male soldiers for combat
duty by next April.
With 200 rookies of the women's
army auxiliary corps, awakened at 6
am. by a cannon, already maintain-
ing a lively pace through the first day
of army routine for women, Mrs Oveta
Culp Hobby, trimly uniformed WAAC
director, explained at a press confer-
ence how the new women’s army will
serve the nation at war.
The first three companies of 150
women will be graduated from the
four weeks of basic training and eight
weeks of specialist training, by Nov.
9, the director said.
Mrs. Hobby, who has the rank of a
major, said the women soldiers may
be sent anywhere In the world. But
she specified that plans for the first
WAAC members who complete training
call for their transfer to eastern sea-
board cities for air raid warning duty
and to 19 regular army posts to replace
men for fighting.
Mrs Hobby said 20 companies would
be trained by Jan. 1, 1943.
"By next April we will have trained
25.000." she said.
Where the trained WAAC member^
will go will depend upon housing fa-
cilities which army camps can provide
for women members, Mrs Hobby said,
but women will not be assigned to reg-
ular army units In groups of less than
50 "for obvious reasons."
Three-fifths of the women trained
between today and January 1, about
1,800, will be stationed at eastern air
raid warning posts. Air raid warning
(Continued on Page Six)
§
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WAR REVENUE
BILL IN FINAL
PASSAGE STAGE
Measure To Lower Nor-
mal and Surtax In-
come R*te»; Slated To
Take 6 Billions.
ilik?:
Charged with conspiracy to evade the selective service act and the
alien registration law. these three sectional officers of the German-
American Bund are shown in New York after pleading not guilty
in federal court. They were ordered held in bail of $10,000 each.
Left to right are Josef Belohlavek, Cleveland Bund leader; Walter F.
BchneUer, Jr., Erie, Pa., leader, and Joseph Bachmajer, organizer
of the Bund in Erie.
Freeman Assured Leahy Will Be
01 Speakership Of Named Military
House By Bob Kerr Co-Ordinator Soon
New Vital
Process For
Rubber
WASHINGTON. Juh 20 (U.R>—'The
house today voted to set the excess
profits tax rate on corporations at 90
per cent, an Increase of 2'n per cent
above the rate original!, recommended
by the ways and means committee.
At the same time, the chamber re-
jected a committee proposal to reduce
the normal and surtax rate for cor-
poration income taxes from 45 per cent
to 40 per cent.
Fiscal experts estimated that the
action would add about $390,000,000
to the contemplated yield from the
measure, bringing to more than $6,-
500.000.000 the estimate of the total
new revenue which the bill would pro-
duce.
There was no immediate estimate of
how much additional revenue would
be brought in by the boost In the ex-
cess profits rate, but Inasmuch as its
yield with the lower figures was esti-
mated at $6,143,000,000 it was believed
the increase would bring the yield
to nearly $6 $ X),000,000
That still would leave the bill more
than $2,000,000,000 below the goal set
by President Roosevelt and the treas-
ury as necessary to help pay the un-
precedented costs of the war and to
help ward oft inflation by absorbing a
larger part of the national Income.
In rejecting the wavs and means
committee's recommendation lor low-
Russians Mass Force For Decisive
Battle With Advancing Nazis; Help
Arrives From U.S.; Egypt Stronger
Kiska Harbor May Earn
Title Of Darkest Tomb
Ever To Hide Jap Hopes
The following Is one In a series
of exclusive dispatches on the war
in the Aleutians. The dispatch was
written by correspondent Keith
Wheeler of the Chicago Times, which
has made the articles available to
all newspapers through the United
Press and other press associations.
The dispatches have been approved
by the navy.
W ins Coveted I lonor
Demo Governor Nomi- Former Ambassador To gft* ^e.^chambeT^wed
nee
Gets House in
Order Prior to Leav-
ing on Trip to Wash-
ington.
Take Over Important
Duties by Appoint-
ment Frc m FDR.
111., who moved to over
' ride the committee. The standing vote
was 180 to 160.
The huge bill also would boost rates
i Continued on Paw** Three*
WASHINGTON. July Jl. (U.R)— Pres-
ident Roosevelt is expected to name
Admiral William D. Leahy soon to be I'T'TTITC PGD
coordinator of military activities dl- LUMItII 1 1 LLo I* UK
OKL/HOMA CITY. July 20. (UP.)—
Harold Freeman, 39, a Pauls Valley
attorney, was virtually assured of the
house speakership designation today as redly under the commander-in-chief.
Robert S. Kerr Democratic nominee Leahy, recently returned from
for governor, conferred with legislators Prance where he has been the Ameri-
before leaving for Washington tonight, can ambassador, may be recalled to
Klrksey Nix, 28, a University of Ok- active duty in the navy to provide him committee members and committee
lahoma law student from Eufaula in with sufficient rank to carry on his chairman, as appointed Saturday by
McIntosh county, w^s slated to become duties. He is understood to have al- post commander Ghayn Ray, were an-
AM. LEG. NAMED
Roscoe Frye post American Legion
By Keith Wheeler
(Copyright 1942. Chicago Times. Inc.)
Distributed by United Press
AT SEA WITH THE PACIFIC
FLEET (Delayed).—Kiska harbor may
earn a >lace in history as the dreari-
est tomb ever to receive the corpse
of an Invader's hope to conquer the I
world.
It may be that Honshu's hopeful j
little men have chosen the loggy bay-
under the black peaks ol Kiska's hills
to launch their last serious attempt to (
.nvadc and conquer the United States.
It now seems more likely they have
chosen a place to die.
Midway was their first choice and
they failed there. Now despite repeti-
tious punishment by American bomb-
ers they are doggedly assembling in
Kiska.
Already the emperor's high prowed
ships are going down at their moor-
ings. victims of bombs falling day and
night from big brown and gray planes
running a shuttle service of destruc-
tion along the Aleutian chain.
The big PBY Catalina flying boats
first located the Japanese in Kiska
harbor June 10. They had moved In
during a stormy week.
The battle began June 11 when the
first flights of navy Catallnas and
(Continued on Page Four)
By L. W. Shollenberger
United Press staff Correspondent
WASHINGTON, July 20 (U.R)—The
agriculture department» today an-
nounced that its research laboratory
In Peoria, HI., has developed a short,
economical process for making buty-
lene glycol—an Important factor In
the production of synthetic rubber
from farm products.
Chemists at the laboratory have suc-
ceeded In getting excellent yields of
pure butadiene—from which synthetic
rubber Is made—from corn made buty-
lene glycol, the department said in an
announcement Issued through the of-
fice of war Information. Until the
process Is developed to a semi-com-
mercial scale, the department chem-
ists are making no predictions.
Butylene glycol Itself has been
relatively rare chemical with several
Important war uses. It is used In the
manufacture of antl-freeze and com-
mercial solvents.
The department's new process for
production of butylene glycol involves
the fermentation of plentyful farm
crops, such as corn and wheat. It al-
ready Is being produced on a semi-
commercial scale.
Three steps would be Involved In the
production of rubber from farm crops
by this method—raw agricultural ma-
terial to butylene glycol, butylene gly-
col to butadiene and butadiene to rub-
ber. The last step is already known
and the major problem remaining Is
conversion of butylene glycol to buta-
diene on a commercial scale.
One of the laboratory officials said
the process means that ‘‘we have suc-
ceeded in making a cheap rubber-like
substance from soybean and com oil
that may fill some of the uses of rub-
ber."
The announcement came as mem-
bers of a senate agriculture sub com-
mittee predicted senate passage this
week of proposed legislation for estab-
lishment of a rubber supply agency to
handle synthetic rubber production
from farm products.
Chairman Guy M Olllette. D., Iowa,
said Sen Elmer Thomas. D„ Okla,
would bring the measure before the
senate lor consideration tomorrow.
Gillette also revealed that his sub-
committee “has decided to pay no at-
tention' to war production board
chairman Donald M Nelson's opposi-
tion to the measure ■.
The proposed legislation, denounced
by Nelson as "extremely dangerous,"
would deprive the WPB of much of
its control over the synthetic rubber
program by establishing a separate
agency to utilize farm commodities in
making rubber substitutes. Nelson's
criticism was aimed at a provision
Which would empower the 310.000 a
year director of the agency to grant
majority floor leader of the house.
Merle Lansden, Beaver, was consid-
ered the leading candidate for assist-
ant floor leader. J. D. McCarthy, Ok-
lahoma City, had strong backing for
chairman of the Democratic house
caucus. He will preside until new of-
ficers are elected.
Freeman, nominated for a fifth term
in the house, had only one formidable
opponent after five days of sessions in
Oklahoma City hotels. John Steel Bat-
son. Marietta, was virtually out of the
picture although there still were some
efforts, to name him house speaker.
Opposition to Freeman was expressed
by some house members because he
was the majority floor leader under
Gov. Leon Phillips during the last
session. Freeman, however, joined the
Kerr campaign early.
Nix. unopposed for a third term in
the house, campaigned for Kerr
throughout the primary.
Freeman's apparent designation was
In the making after a number of oth-
er speaker candidates were eliminated.
Joe Chambers, Tulsa, was a leading
candidate until Kerr defeated Gomer
Smith In the primary.
John Holliman. Bartlesville, was in
the picture for a while. Purman Wil-
son. Purcell, also announced himself
as a candidate.
Kerr attempted to stop the speak-
ership contest last week but the house
members decided they would rather
settle the Issue at this time.
State Democratic chairman France
Paris appealed to them to wait until
after the November general election.
Most of the house members, however,
remained In Oklahoma City and con-
tinued their campaigns.
Kerr then said that he would'go Into
the matter of designating a speaker
and floor leader choice when he was
given his certificate of nomination.
Kerr planned to spend several days
In Washington. He planned to visit
members of the congressional delega-
tion, President Roosevelt and national
administration leaders.
ready submitted his resignation as am-
bassador.
Both the army and the navy were
nounced this morning by John L Ech-
ols, adjutant of the Sapulpa post
Blmey Herrin Is chairman of the
said to be in agreement on the need Americanism committee which ln-
of a coordinating head, responsible eludes Waldo Huycke. N. E. Michael,
only to the president, for global mill- and O R. Rule,
tary operations Leahy, an Intimate J. B. Hickey is the baseball chair-
friend and long-time military advisor man
to Mr. Roosevelt, is represented as be- Members of the sons committee in-
lng satisfactory to both services. elude John L. Echols, chairman; G. C.
Since his retirement as chief of nav- Bowman, and W. R. Cline,
al operations in 1939. Leahy has acted H P. Herzer has been appointed lir-
as presidential "trouble shooter” both ing squad chairman
as governor of Puerto Rico in 1940 and Under direction of C. D. Edgerton,
as ambassador to Vichy. , Earl Hermes and H B. Greenberg will
He Is generally credited with having conduct any business which Is con-
lald down the basis for the great naval cerned with the Boy Scouts.
OFFICERS RAID
NEGRO ADDITION;
THREE ARRESTED
expansion program, and most of the
naval leaders today were at one time
under his Influence.
Leahy Is a proponent of the con-
centration of forces theory in military
J. O. Edwards heads the boys’ state
committee with B J. Braheney and
G. B. Grigsby assisting.
Resolutions committee includes Glenn
O. Young, chairman. Roy WUkonson
strategy, and while chief of naval op-, and Eugene B. Smith,
eratlons. firmly established the con- I Members of the Christmas commlt-
cept of keeping the Pacific fleet intact tee are Don Vickers, chairman; Lon
as both an offensive and defensive T. Jackson, Hobart Wilson and S. N.
weapon. ; Terry.
During recent days, Leahy has been Publicity is given out under the dl-
ln constant consultation with high rectlon of O. R. Rule whose commit-
army and navy officials His new du- tee also Includes John L. Echols and
ties cannot be defined in advance. In- N. Sheffel.
formants said, since they will be Urn- | G. B. Grigsby is head of the poppy
ited only by the authority of the pres- committee and he Lx assisted by T H
ldent. Leahy will report directly to Mr. Harper and James Zartaludes
Roosevelt and will be the intermediary Head of the auditing group is G. B
between the president and the chiefs Grigsby and his committee includes
of staff. ! H L Wilson and T H. Harper
--— Chairman H. O. Wstenbarger along
TIRE AND WHEEL STOLEN , with Fred Virden and E. C. Bryan will
Harry Jurey, 324 South Oak', report- take care of the post's transactions
ed to city police this morning that a with the army, while the navy group,
tire and wheel were stolen from his ( under the direction of John L. Echols,
car shortly after 2 o'clock this morn- E. L. Patton, and R Brooke Thrift,
tng. Jurey said the car war parked In will sponsor any business connected
the street. ! with the navy.
In a raid Saturday night In the col-
ored section of the city, Sapulpa po-
lice, assisted by county officials, con-
fiscated three pints of liquor and nine
gallons of beer.
At a barbecue stand at 206 North
Hickory owned by Lee Birmingham,
three pints of liquor were found and
three arrests were made. Birmingham
was booked on a possession of liquor
charge and John Smith and Paul Gay
were arrested for loitering where liquor
By Joe Alex Morris
United Press Foreign Editor
The red army appeared to be mass-
ing strength on the lower Don river
I front today for a decisive battle
' against the still advancing German
| offensive toward the Caucasus
stabbing anew into the enemy
1 northern flank at Voronezh and exact-
ing the greatest passible toll In the
Donets basin, soviet Marshal Semyon
Timoshenko was making a fighting
retreat southward through flaming
villages in the apparent hope of ex-
hausting the enemy and making a
; stand in defense of Rostov and the
j toad to Stalingrad.
I The Russian tactics were compara-
ble to the British retreat Into Egypt'
to the extent that the most Important
factor was to keep the red army to-
1 get her, avoid encirclements and select
the most favorable ground for a stand
such as the British imperials made at
El Alamein.
The British, using larger RAF and
American air squadrons for some of
the biggest raids of the dessert war.
still were holding the initiative in
Egypt and had taken 6,000 prisoners
' in the last 10 days.
United States army heavy bombers
again made an effective daylight raid
t on the axis supply base at Tobruk, the
1 British navy again shelled Matruh
with good effects—dissolving axis sug-
gestions that it had left the Mediter-
ranean- and the RAF made an un-
precedented bombing attack that
smashed grounded enemy planes at
the El Daba airdrome.
There was encouraging news from
China, too. as a result of Chinese
counter attacks that recaptured four
cities, including Wenchow on the coast
from the Japanese, and American
bombing attacks on 60 Japanese air-
planes grounded at Canton as well as
against the enemy headquarters In
Klangsl province.
But dispatches from Chungking re-
ported that a large number of Japan-
ese troops had been withdrawn from
southeastern China to the northern
provinces, again hinting eht Tokyo
is planning a stab in the back at m-
berla If the German offensive In west-
ern Europe Is successful.
The greatest German strength still
was diverted southeastward In an ef-
| fort to encircle Rostov, which was
I heavily bombed as the enemy report-
edly advanced to within about 30 mllea
on the north.
The red army redoubled a great bat-
) tie against the axis offensive In south-
! ern Russia and struck again Into the
enemy flank at Voronezh today but
peril to the Caucasus wu undimln-
; Ished and there were new hints of
l Japanese plans to stab at eastern Si-
beria.
Friday and Saturday seemed to be Fighting on the Don river near Vo-
soldler-on-furlough day In Sapulpa ] ronezh continued to swing In favor of
judging from the number of boys In the red army, which seized an enemy
uniform here on visit. .....
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... .f t flE
I Distinguished as only the eighth
woman In the history of China to
have a medical degree, Dr. Mar-
garet Hie Ding Lin, bom In Foo-
chow but educated in the U. S.,
is honored at Denver, Colo., with
a degree as a fellow of the Inter-
national College of Surgeons. She
is the only woman to have re-
ceived this coveted honor. Dr.
Lin, who resides and practices In
Chicago, delivered 6.500 babies
during the 22 years she practiced
in China.
| . ^/ioaru/ *y{botli
Jhe
L
own •
®r *tkb«r? CalMtcll
bridgehead south of the cltv, reported
some 8,930 enemy troops slain and ap-
Here and there: Charles Hartman i peared to be attacking on all sectors
bustling around the Clayton building
and clearing out old storage to make
room for the fixing up of new offices
Is sold After pleading guilty to the i Mrs. B B Burnett too happy over
charge In police court this morning,. Kerr; Luke Little passing the time of
_ ... • . i .<n pa s dou Korn thnrn nrtvl iron - Arirtiu Uocfnn
Birmingham was fined $19.50 and
costs. The case against the other two
was dismissed.
The raiders discovered nine gallons
of beer in Bully Hogan's residence at
310 North Hickory Hogan was fined
$19.50 and costs In police court this
morning.
Also investigated were LeRoy Oay,
202 North Hickory; Willie Gunn and
his “Little Harlem" at 505 West John-
son; Wiley Lane, West Johnson; and
Boots Jackson, North Burnett. No oth-
er charges were filed, however
Accompanied by Albert Randall, Van
Nelson and A B Holderby of the Creek
county sheriff's office, city police of-
ficials who were members of the raid-
ing party included chief of police J. O.
Edwards, Jack Brumlev, A. C Walker,
Paul Owen Jim Knight, Frank Hays,
and J. P. Milam.
PRODUCTION OF OLD GLORY
HAS HIGH PRIORITY RATING
Occupied Europe's Underground V-Army Ready To
Strike Axis Paralyzing Blow As 2nd Front Opens
day here there and yon; Addle Hasten
turned store keeper now that Hugh
has gone to bomber plant duty; Mrs
Ray Heagy boasting of her volume of
canned foods; Pat Cunningham happy
that her uptown job doesn't break Into
her housekeeping too much these days;
school teachers already beginning to
use the term “when school starts" with
a serious note in their voices; Ruth
behind strong spearheads that Includ-
ed American and British airplanes and
tanks The axis forces were described
as definitely on the defensive now.
The soviet gains In the two-weeks-
old battle of Voronezh began to con-
stitute a more Important danger to
the German north flank (although no
decisive progress had yet been made)
and It had definitely disrupted the
nazi high command’s hope of breaking
the secondary railroad Unas running
southeastward from Moscow and thus
splitting the Russian armies.
But In the south, the enemy menace
McNamara browner than a berry and to Rostov and Stalingrad was unabat-
all of It out of the tiniest little white
jar.
Nobody wanted to do anything for
ed despite stubborn and often success-
ful Russian counter blowi.
The Germans had taken the once
great war center of Voroshilovgrad and
anybody this morning—buy them a pressed southward on both sides of the
drink, nor nothin—so unlike Monday I Donets river, while It was believed that
a week ago the day before the primary enemy forces also were trying to fan
. . . Just an observation In retrospect. ‘ ‘ ’ " J
out toward Stalingrad after claiming
a foothold on the Shakhty-Stallngrad
railroad
Rostov was heavily bombed and
CLEVELAND. (U.»- When war pro-
duqtlon priorities were handed out
Old Glory was not forgotten. It has
an A-2 rating.
This assignment of a rating on the
part of the WPB assures materials for
not only the making of American flags,
but for marine signal flags, flags of
the United Nations, religious flags,
service flags, office of civilian defense
flags, railroad flags and danger signal
flags.
The acute shortage of materials has
caused flag manufacturers to reduce
their output drastically — and turn
their attentions to the American flag.
Frank Walton, depute director of the
textile branch of the WPB. considers
Old Glory a “very essential" part of
the war production program.
By John A. Parris I interview
United Press Staff Correspondent ] He said he was confident that his
LONDON, July 20 (U.R)—Occupied army was capable of a mass blow at
Europe's underground V-army, mobll- the axis, coincidental with the opening
tzed by the mysterious Colonel Brit- of another campaign on the continent,
ton a year ago yesterday, is ready to and that It was ready and eager for it.
strike the axis a paralyzing blow the Open warfare rages In Yugoslavia,
moment the allies open a second front, where Gen. Draja M ikhallovltch's 230,-
At least 1.000,000 patriots have been i 000 troops are battling 600,000 axis sol-
shot, hanged or tortured to death by diers along the borner of Yugoslavia
the axis, but the multitudes who live and Italy. Guerrilla bands in Albania,
keep several million German and Ital- Greece. Rumania and France harass
lan soldiers tied down In 645.000 square; the axis night and day.
miles of occupied territory, constantly The Germans admit growing unrest,
fighting Increasing sabotage, shootings Their radio said Polish guerrillas were
and bombings. sabotaging German ’rains bound for
Colonel Britton, who organized the the Russian front. Three Poles were
V-army by radio and coached it week- executed for having been members of
ly in methods of tormenting the Ger- bands that derailed trains near War-
mans and Italians, has not spoken to saw. Seven Polish uillroad men were
his followers for three and a half shot for derailing a German train near
months. The last time he broadcast, Lublin, and another near Cracow.
The 630/100 pounds of steel used In
priorities on critical mat rials to firms manicure scissors last year would make
(Continued on Page Five) 305 75-mm. howitzers.
French, reported his guerrillas had ] times"
canteen In Brest, blown up a railway
line and derailed a train near Le
Havre and wrecked an electrical
transformer near Lorlent.
Besides killing axis forces In open
battle, General Mlkhallovltch's men
were reported to be attacking German
barges on the Danube, carrying oil to
the relch.
The Germans arrested a new group
of hostages In Holland. Including the
Dutch "Kipling," Anton Van Dulnk-
erton, who will be shot if sabotage con-
tinues In an effort to stop under-
ground resistance In the Netherlands,
the Germans have started transporting
Dutch youths to Germany tor forced
labor Eventually, the Germans plan
to transport 3,000.000 Dutch males to
Germany and occupied Russia
Adolf Hitler promised farmers that
they would receive "premium payments
as a reward for their absolution of
patriotic duties In the spirit of the
Susan Carol Sheffel has a habit of
wanting to call to the moon at about I „ STnEa BTSli
8 o'clock just when her mother wants reiihai*
to turn off the sun and call It a day-I _^“dh
not that Susie Isn't the winner most m“es
of the time Morton's theme song has
turned out to be "If You Knew Susie"!
Among other things disappearing In
the reconstruction of the old Commer-
cial hotel on North Water Ls a sign In
one of the rooms that says In bold . : fV,_
, i .. itfirxif v/xur bombers, was continuing And tn^t tnt
red letters-"Please Don t Bring Your „
pushed on toward Novocherkassk.
which ls only 30 miles from the gate-
way to the Caucasus.
Dispatches from Moscow neither de-
nied nor confirmed these reports, but
It was said that strong Ruasian coun-
ter punching, aided by American built
Whisky Here to Drink It."
The only thintg left to accent the
summer heat is the department store
summer fur sales and they'll be com-
ing along now In a few weeks. With-
out a secretary at the Chamber of
Commerce—the president and his first
assistants are getting something of a
workout. Myron Cunningham, Depew's
teaching lmpressarlo, was walking
around the town today heavily laden
with cultural looking volumes — they
could have been budget books.
enemy advance appeared to have been
slowed over the weekend. All parachute
troops landed behind the Russian lines
last week were reported wiped out.
The German high command said
(Continued on Page Six)
OUR WEATHER MAN
he told them his next call would be The headquarters of Gen Charles
for a mass, coordinated blow at their De Gaulle, leader of the fighting
oppressors.
I nope my call for that blow will
not be long delayed," he said In an1 mandy, dynamited a German military 1 honey, butter and poultry.
Cowboy actor Gene Autry, former
Sapulpan, winds up work at his studio |
today and files to Chicago tomorrow |
where he will be Inducted Into the
army air corps Wednesday as a tech-
nical sergeant. After his induction Au-1
try will appear In a show at soldiers’!
OKLAHOMA;
Thundershower*
for additional production of ] field, Chicago, on July 28 He will go' north and central portion* this after-
ambushed a German column In Nor-j such products as milk, eggs, cheese, | into training at Boling Field, Wash- j noon and tonight, somewhat cooler in
irngton, D. C.
> north portion today and tonight.
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Young, John W. Sapulpa Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 27, No. 271, Ed. 1 Monday, July 20, 1942, newspaper, July 20, 1942; Sapulpa, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1524591/m1/1/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.