Sapulpa Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 30, No. 148, Ed. 1 Saturday, February 24, 1945 Page: 2 of 6
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f aCE TWO
SAPULFA HERALD, SAPULPA, OKLAHOMA
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 194S.
SATL
SAPULPA HERALD
EzteMlihrd in 1*14
Rntereo u aecond-claaa mall mailer, September 8. 1914, at tb«
postofflee at Sapulpa, Oklahoma, under an act of March I. 1891.
R. P. MATTHEWS............. Owner and Publisher
DELIVERED BT CARRIER ANYWHERE IN SAPULPA,
MOUNDS, KIEFER. BOWDEN AND KELLYVILLE
One Week _______________________________________ 18 Oenta
One Calendar Month________________________-______80 Centa
Three Months (must be paid In advance) _________________ 81 25
Six Months (must be paid In advance) _____________1------- 82 90
One Year (must be paid In advance) _____________________ 86 00
ALL MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS PAYABLE IN ADVANCE
Three Months ________________________________—------- 8128
Six Months _______________________________________—---- 63.80
One Year ___________________________________________ 88 00
WASHINGTON
Draft, Lend-Lease Acts I Price and Wcge Control
Up to Current Congress | On Congressional Docket
Special to Central Press
• WASHINGTON—Thus far Congress has devoted the present ses-
The King needs room. He will not share a den filled
with evil companions nor a mind filled with evil thoughts;
Lift up your heads, oh ye gates, and he ye lifted up ye ever-
lasting doors, and the King of Glory shall come in.—Psalm
24:7.
Amateur Psychiatry
slon to two things- manpower legislation and the nomination of
former Vice President Henry A. Wallace to be secretary of com-
merce But a lot of other business will be coming along.
Tlie Senate and the House will have to consider
" m In the next few months bills extending the main
fgJpT tom features ot the Selective Service act, the Lend
Lease act and Price and Wage Control laws.
¥ Major provisions of the Selective Service act ex-
L* ,,, x|PJ plre May 19, and the Lend Lease and Price and
Ajf - F i Wage Control acts expire June 30.
PP^(NfWf4»B ^ Bills appropriating additional billions to carry
“ on the war and to mulntaln the different govern-
ment agencies will be coming up for action.
President Roosevelt has not yet submitted his
expanded social security program, or recommen-
dations for compulsory post-war military train-
ing, or for reducing the gold reserve requirements
of the federal reserve banks. These things were
promised in his "State of the Union” and budget
messages to Congress.
Pending is a bill sponsored by several Democratic senators to
carry out the projected Wallace program for full post-war employ-
ment.
If the proposed world security organization Is worked out In a
full-dress United Nations conference following the "Big Three" meet-
ing, the Senate and perhaps the House will have to pass on treaties
or legislation putting It Into effect.
The only possibility, however, of House action would be If legisla-
tion Itself becomes necessary—as the Senate Is guarding jealously Ita
constitutional monopoly on treaty ratification.
The Capitol
Dates to
Remember
-Last day to pay third
valorem taxes without
"Stop trying to practice amateur psychiatry on veterans
back from war. Don’t be misled by widely published at-
tempts to tell yon bow to bandlr these ‘changed men. In-
stead, welcome them home naturally as what they are—
fundamentally the same boys who went away. This is the
urgent advice offered by Don Wharton in his article, T he
Soldiers Say Don’t Do It!" condensed from Common Sense
in the Reader's Digest for March.
Interviewed on the subject, a bunch of combat veterans
back from overseas deplored the patronizing, oversympa-
thetic, kid-glove treatment they had met on their return,
and hoped that other homecoming soldiers escape a similar
reception. "They werf disgusted with the impression created
among their home-folks that most returned soldiers were
strange neurotics who didn't want to talk about what they d
been through.” Mr. Wharton states.
In contrast to "a recent spate of articles and advertise-
ments purporting to help relatives help veterans in their
'painful readjustment to civilian life, including a program
hook of the OWI which advises against questions of combat
experience, the author quotes verbal testimony of a number
of the interviewed group of veterans An infantryman
wounded in Italy had his furlough home almost ruined by his
wife’s refusal to ask aksinglr question about what I d seen
and how 1 got nicked—all the things I couldn t put into
letters." A bov with his leg in a cast confided that his mother
had neither asked how he was hurt nor mentioned the cast,
pretending not to see it, but all the time treating me as if
I were her pregnant daughter. An ordnance sergeant was
made "nervous as hell" by his mother watching me all the
time and trying not to do anything that would make me
nervous."
Mr. Wharton quotes Maj. Gen. William R. Arnold, chief
of chaplains. U. S. Army, as saying. "Encourage returned
•ervice men to talk about their experiences Genuine respect
and affection will do more than all studied efforts to heal
the hurts of the human spirit."
i - -—o-o--
• THE PROJECTED DEFENSE OF BERLIN against the surging
Red tide of the Soviet armies Is generally felt to be the decision of
Adolf Hitler himself and not of the German high command.
Although the Junker military caste was reputed to be In the
saddle on the eastern front after Hitler's intuition got the Nazis into
trouble, Washington military sources feel that the Fuehrer is once
again making the Anal decisions which will crash Germany down to
ultimate and utter defeat.
One main reason is that the German high command—all disciples
of the famed military strategist von Clausewitt—would never have
edged the Nazis toward their present unsurmountable difficulties if
there were any way out.
Masters of retreat, military Improvisation and delay, the Junkers
could conceivably have staved off the Russians for many months.
But Hitler's plan produced a rout.
In the second place, Hitler, Propaganda Minister Josef Goebbels,
Hermann Goering and their henchmen are determined to go down in
a blaze of Wagnerian drama—a bloody twilight of the gods snatched
from the pages of Teutonic mythology.
The shades of Siegfried, the Valkyries and Wotan are descending
over Berlin, and Hitler apparently Is satisfied that if the end must
come, It must come In this way. His oft-repeated
utterance that Germany either would win or vanish
us a nation appears no longer to have been the mere
wagging of a psycopath's tongue.
Parenthetically, some observers are wondering
whether the German people and their Intoxicating
heritage of legendary warriors and crusading knights will feel con-
strained, after Hitler's last lethal fling and his death, to take much
Interest in the "Niebelungcnlled" and its literary offshoots.
March 1-
quarter ad
penalty
March 1—Deadline for declaring
p* r.onal and Intangible pri perty
assessments
March 1—Red Cross War Fund
campaign starts.
2 — .-'ophomore CiusH play.
March 15—Last day for filing re-
gular 1944 income tax returns, both
state and federal.
March 23—Junior Class play.
March 30—Eater Assembly.
April 1—Easter Sunday.
April 1—Last day to make home-
stead exemption application.
May *—Senior C:ass play.
May 11—Music Week
May 15—Award Assembly.
May 22 -Senior Class day.
Rationing at s Glance
8HOES-Stamps 1, 2 and 3.
"airplane sheet," (book 3) now
good sind remain valid Indefin-
itely.
PROCESSED FOODS—Book 4. blue
stamps X-5, Y-5. Z-5, A-2 and B-2
good through March 31. Stamps C-2
through 0-2, good through April
28. Stamps H-2 through M-2. valid
through June 2.
MEATS. FATS - Book 4, red
stamps Q5 through S5. good until
ninth army spearheads also cap-
lured Glimbach, Gevenich, ftuhr-
loh, Boslar, Siegersdotf, Ham-
barh, Korrrnztg, and Baael on Ihr
east side of the Roer above and
below Juellrh.
At Baal, the Yanks were 3’
milts Hortheast 0f LlgniOh and thi
same distance southw eat ol the Nazi
base at Erkelenz At Himbaeh, they
were on the edge of the Staats for-j
est and barely 19 miles east of
Cologne.
The deepest penetration beyond
the Roer was believed to have
been made by armored columns ® ,aI??
pushing out past Boslar.
SOC
»nal da;
WCA r
19th.
*5lh
Christli
Judy cli
b. H.
jstess 5
Membe
! Wome
(Continued from page ]
cial service force and the__...
Custer and 88th Blue Devil divi- F*-
slons in the spring offensive u. Violet
Rome and continued to serve in ks
support of the 88th and 85th di- P'j
visions as they bridged the Arno pO'odl
river and plerred the Gothic line I1*1 Mr
A Jack of all tfades outfit, the
19th has built railroads and con-iAt*'en"
ANNE BAXTER
AT CRITERION
i —at Sunday dinner Just
their piosperous neighbors
nearby town
Miss Baxter plays the role
Tessa who muthers
as do
in the
30 wit
_ . ■■■P “Sunday Dinner for a Soldier" blood, the kids themselves and
March 31. Stamps T5 and Xo good js p1C(Ure selected by the Cri- Grandfcnthers, the impetuous and
through April 28 Stamps Y5, Z5 terjon theater for showing at to- irresponsible, played by Charles
and A2 through D2 good through ujgtit's prevue, continuing through Winninger.
June 2. Tuesday. It stars Anne Baxter and Hodlak is the soldier who accl-
GASOLINE—14 A coupons good j j0(ln Ho^jak dentally wanders Into the house-
fov four gallons each through storv Is said to be rich in boat home and into Tessa's heart
will
March 21. B5. C5, B6 and C6 cou-
pons good for five gallons each.
BASKETBALL
Feb. 27, Muskogee—here*
March 2, Bristow—here.
•denotes conference game*.
V- -------Y
crete pillboxes, drained swamps anlf1 'J'41
laid pipelines. Once the engine r,]®WA
used a gas mask, converted into rc
diver's helmet, for underwater w rk Allce
On another occasion they operated
a ferry boat They have served la
support of British, Canadian. New
the orphaned Zealand and French troops.
They have been commended by
Lt. Gen. Omar N. Bradley, now
commanding the 21st army group
on the western front, and Lt.
Gen. George S. Patton jr., third
army commander.
Col Joseph O. Killian, Altadena,
Cali!., commanded the 19th engi-
honest lnughter with an enthral- 1 heirs is a love story that _____ _______
inj romance from which stem; a warm lonely hearts and thrill hap- neers until recently. Present com
delightful and unusual plot The py on s. There is said to be abund- man‘der js col John D. Cole Jr., St.
story Is of a family of five, im- ant laughter throughout the pic-, Petersburg, Fla Col. Killian h..
poverished, but rich In spirit, ture.
whose home is a weather beaten Others in the picture are Anne
houseboat moored in a Florida la- Revere. Connie Marshall, Chill
goon, and whose burning desire is Will, Robert Bailey, Bobby Drls-
to entertain a soldier—any soldiier coll and Jane Darwell.
i Petersburg,
since taken charge of the set i
army corps engineer section
Among personnel in this regiment _
Is Pfc. Richard H Hendrickson. o!>En ,
Belle
ethodi
eels w
elen i
30 c
ith M
artlett
:lock i
n.
WMU
anthly
dock
Loulsi
.rtUdgew.
30 wl
Kiefer, and S-Sgt. Charles K Cook,
J.
Drum right.
Varle
Its FI
Siagfriad,
Wotan and
Hitiar
• COMMERCIAL LARGE-SCREEN TELEVISION may be intro-
duced 1n Great Britain within the next six years, according to fig-
ures furnished the U. S. commerce department. The department adds
that this British development perhaps will be Improved with tech*
nicolor in the following two years.
We re Telling You..
• * •
or The Inside Dope on
Downtown Sapulpa!
• * •
By FAYE and the GANG
Thursday's sunshine caught Fred
Fretz out with his overshoes on
. . . those arctics had been so much
a part of his costume in the past
rainy week that Freddie couldn't
feel fully clothed without them
but long 'bout 'leven 'clock he be- \
gan to feel convinced that the sun
was here to stay for a while so he
shed these oT overshoes and
stowed them awsy in his car for
some future date ... we hope a
rather distant one. too!!!
Oh, Slush!
The blizzard bad turned Chicago’s Michigan avenue into
a pedestrian hazard of churned u/> slush. A pretty young
thing, standing irresolutely at the crossing, extended a dainty
foot and as hastily withdrew it Ihr hig Irish traffic cop re-
garded her sympathetically. It took hut a minute to blow
his whistle, stride to the cutH gather heT up in his arms, and
deposit her carefully on the other side Whereupon the young
lady, her eyes blazing, slapped him—hard. Without a word
he once more swept her from her feet and bore her, kicking,
hack to her original position. Then he released the traffic.
—Reader's Digest.
A hazardous but amusing wU» S0T)ate
• • • • | to determine the motives of a
Little Larrv Owen . . . very young suitor is the basis for the romantic
son of Mabel and Paul Owen, is comedy "Bride By Mistake" whirh
*, sa-JSJrtfST SS “ fir B-t SK <“ —.....
Tuesday
Alan Marshall is seen in the
role of Capt. Tony Travis, a re-
turned army fl'cr in a rest camp
Dream On, Buddy
A young Marine, recently returned to the States after two
years overseas, ordered a glass of brer one evening in a well
known bar in New York's Times Square, hor the next half
hour he sat at the table smoking his pipe, staring off into space
dreamily, then staring at the beer.
Finally curiosity got the better of the waiter, and he
asked if anything was wrong with the beer Its this way.
the Marine explained solemnly. Most of the hoys in tny
outfit were New Yorkers, and for two years I've heard them
talk continually of the day they'd come home, come to this
place, and sit down to a tall, cold glass of beer. So vc
dreamed of it, too. ,
"I understand that." said the waiter, "but why aren t you
drinking the beer>” ,, ...... ...
"Oh. that would sioil mv dream said the Marine,
can't stand the taste of the stuff."—Readet's Digest.
E C. Morris, Mr. and Mrs. E E Armstrong and
Thompson and Rev. Robert Lackey kenson.
and Mrs Paul Grady, all of Drum-
right, visited Sheriff J. Arthur Wil-
son yesterday.
Miss Dora Abel of Hollywood Is
visiting here with her sister. Mrs.
C. C. Masters, and Mr Masters
Mrs. Ira Anderson will preside
as hostess tomorrow at the meet-
ing of the Re-double Bridge club
which will be held In her home on
West Lincoln avenue.
..Mrs. Grandstaff ana small daugh-
ter of Muskoge returned to their
home there this morning after a
visit here with the former's sister,
Mrs J W Baker
Queen Esther circle of First
Methodist church will hold a so-
cial me ting Friday evening In the
heme of Miss Edith Shafer Mrs.
H J Cockrell ol Tulsa superin-
tendent ol young people's work, will
(be a special guest at this meeting.
Friends of Mrs. O. W. Bruton
called at her home on South Park
Istret last evening to pay farewell
I courtesy to her before her depar-
Miss Esther Wil-
| You 're Telling Me!
I- By WILUAM HITT-
Oh. These Sailors
Requests from service men to their Commanding Officer
or extensions of leave are based generally on one or more
if a half dozen pleas: sick family, missed train, wife expet t;
ng. tax mailers, etc. But lately a bluejacket at Bunker Hill
Indiana) Naval Air Station came up with a new one:
"Request ten day* extension for shake-down cruise ot
lew wife
It was granted.
60c
50c
45c
40c
Nothing Like Frankness
In the mining country of West Virginia I stopped at a
,odest restaurant and was astonished by the menu which
sad s
Small, drv,' tough steak -
Thin pork chops, mostly bone and
Tasteless meat loaf.....
Fat. greasy spareribs - - (* , * ‘
Why do you list meat like this3 I asked.
"Because that’* what it is " the waiter said.
"But even it is is. couldn't you make it sound a little
tore attractive?'' , . .. ,
"Look ... if y'al] was reg'lar here, y d know better, he
•plied "Our menus always tell ya just what ta exnect.
hat's been out policy for a long time and we don t Teckon
n changin’ it fer no temp-rary thing like a war.
__o-o—————
| ture for Jier new heme in Spring-
field Mrs C. D Knepper made
the presentation spe ch in present-
ing a gift Troni members of the
Women's Missionary society, First
Methodist church.
Daughters of the King of the
Episcopal church held a meeting
last evening in the home of Mrs.
Mattie Crawford. Lovely gifts at
the social hour were presented ta
Mrs Roy Studley honoring her
birthday Mrs A Disney will be
hostess at the next meeting In two
weeks.
Mrs H H Farrell has returned
from a lew days’ stay In Oklahoma
city
Catholic Ladles were entertained
yesterday afternoon in the home
of Mrs. B C. Kennedy.
A juvenile party given yesterday
in the home of Mrs U. A Pond
By
Central Press Writer
A MISSOURI airways weather
forecaster reported that while
out hunting he shot a ground
hog. What is this—professional
jealousy?
! I !
Betcha Dollar Dyer, who has
just paid up his taxes, announces
that hereafter he is to be known
as Betcha Dime. — -
! ■ I !
Stalin, for one, Grandpappy
Jenkins points out, certaihly ob-
serves that request to not "travol
unnecessarily."
I I I
One more good thaw and
Zadok Dumkopf says he hopes
to recover that unlighted clgaret
he accidently dropped into a
snow drift New Year's Day.
! ! 1
A New Yorker went to court
so he could sell back a house
he bought which later proved to
have a wet cellar. That would
have been no complaint before
repeal.
t ! 1
Chinese dentists, soys Facto-
graphs, seldom use anesthetics
when yanking teeth. And the
Japs thought they could lick a
nation like thatl
! ! I
Spring must be just around
the corner—the neighbor who
borrowed our galoshes on
Thanksgiving Day has just re-
turned them.
celebrated the sixth birthday an- _ _
niversarv cf her daughter. Ruth LOCAL S
Elizab' th Small guests were June
DENT
Wecso,'Be,u 'Thr^r Fern' Single- ON HONOR LIST
TjUI
DR 1
If you want to mnke the day* pass quicklv. buy some-
fng on the installment plan.
-o-o-
Before investing in a going concern, make sure you know
lich way it’s going
—---o-o ■ —■ -—<
ton. Gladys Stuck. Eva Frances _
and Mary Louise Canterbury. Opal NORMAN. Feb. 24 —Guy Berry
Cross, Dorothea nnd Milton Cor- . .
ne\\ Racrte and Lawrence Lang- Jr of 9npulpa was amon* fhe 134
ston. Virginia Knight. Minnie Fcf- University of Oklahoma students
ferman. Nona Hn-bert Betty Bak- who made an "A-" average during
er. Sara Margaret Grandstaff of the semester Just closed, It has been
Muskogee, Billie Stone Inez Doris announced by President George L.
and Mary Ethel Mabry. Mildred Cress
King. Howard Morgan. Junior Fifty-three cities and towns of
Throne Additional guests were Oklahoma and ten states are rep-
Mrs. H. E. Mabry, Mrs C Throne resented in the 11st. he announced,
and Mrs. Grandstaff of Muskogee "We are Intensely proud of tltese
Ekhuse Matrons club met for a students for their excellent schol-
luncheon yesterday with these astlc records," President Cross corn-
members and guests attending: mented Thirty-seven OU students
Mrs Claude Harmony. Mrs. John made straight "A" averages for the
Kolstad. Mrs Carl J Hughes. Mrs first semester.
Newell D Menifee, Mrs. Jack Smith, i -
Lester Katz, running out of
hands in his window the other
mornln' perched a petite spring
hat atop his own head while he
dressed up one of those window
dummies. . . . That was a cute
hat. Lester, but your own curly
mane is just as becoming to
you without it.
Col.
Child
flth N
Worn
(Continued from page 1)
passenger on the crashed I
lerce
r.
He La
, was a
I plane
They were en
their home here when highway
officials were sent by airline au- 1
thorities to overtake them and j,
give them the news that there )nciay,
were some survivors. According a'
to reports the highway officers ^
caught them at Chandler. these
Lt. Col. Frampton is a gradu drlpy
Alan Marshal doesn't seem to be able to make up his mind between
Laraine Day and Marsha Hunt in this scene from "Bride Bv Mistake”
Romantic Comedy
At Yale Prevue
Day, owner of the Hunter ship-
yards. She Is so wealthy, that, to
of Sapulpa high school and ink
1935 graduated from Oklahoma!
University. He was a member of T
the officers reserve and was call' u
Into active duty as a lieutenant in'
March, 1942
At the time he went into ac-
tive duty he was living in Tulsa, ^
employed there as mechanical r'
engineer by Jones and I.aughlin ''
Supply Company.
h
tor some girl in a few years. His
Mommy says he Just loves sand-
wiches . . . even for breakfast . . .
and most men —(specially HUS-
BANDS—won't even look at sand-
wiches Think what an easy time
Larry’s wife will have If he doesn't Norah Hunter
change before he grows up . . . _
she can have sandwiches three i “
times a day.
Hp was promoted from major to! .
discourage fortune hunters and lieutenant colonel September 30,"
newspaper publicity, she uses her 1944, by Gen Doolittle command-
secretary, Mnrshn Hunt to Impel- jng general of the Eighth air’1,
u • senate her whenever she appears force f, * .
in public At the time of hls death Lt.
Weary of such a Job, the secre- Col Frampton was assistant ortl-
tary and her husband set out to nance and chemical offtcer of |0_de.
ous events develop into a climax He artved back in the States in
that is all out enterta nment with January. 1945. after more thnllJa~
plenty of comedy. two years overseas during which
Others in the cast include Allyn time he was based in England. H' p
adjoining the big estate of wealthy Joslyn. Edgar Buchunan Bud Slim onH^af^htiided TKI
played bv Laraine Summerville. duty and was scheduled to return]
H • to England after reporting back
act!
— Washington for reassignment.
radi
Do you know who had more
fun that anybody at Rosie Court-
ney’s shower the other night?
'Twas her grandmother, known
to us all as Mother Courtney,
who was one of the liveliest
guests there. . , . Rosie's Mom
had fun. too ... as for that mat-
ter, didn't we all. Her eyes spar-
kled just like Rosie's when she
saw all those LOVELY gifts
emerging from their wrappings.
Story Of Carrier X
At State Theater
300,000
The State theater’s weekend at-
traction. starting with tonight’s
prevue, showing through Tuesday
I; the story of Carrier X. "Wing
and a Prayer."
The thrilling picture of the car-
rier that Tokyo reported
( Continued from page 1>
Here's a good one on Hrlen Mc-
Daniels, newest addition to the
Herald force. First three or four
days she was down here she
thought when the clock b"ll rang
(it dings every hour) that Boss
Matthews was ringing a bell for
the gang to fall in line and file
out for lunch.
She quits at 4 p.m.. so when
the hell clanged for 4 o’clock she
thought he'd pressed the button
and clanged the bell for her to
leave. 'Course the hell didn't have
her name on it. but she just knew
it meant her.
Bass Matthews IS PRETTY
F I E R C E . . . but he doesn't ring
bells nor crack whips . . . that Is.
not yet.
hours as the advance drilled into
their main defenses behind the
Roer.
Ju'lich. 22 miles east of Colgone
and probably the toughest German
• iv* Lila*. „ .v sunk stronghold on the Roer. fell to the
three t'mes. twice almost was, stars ninth army after a lierce street
Don Ameche, Dana Andrews and battle. Remnants of the enemy
William Eythe. with Charles Bick- garrison still were holding out tn-
ford. Sir Cedric Hardwicke and side the town s walled, moated cii-
many other actors acie' morning, but the l*de of
f ■ on the carrier Is depicted, battle already had swept out bc-
(iense moments, the waiting yond them and their elimination
1 id finally thr real thing -the was only a matte, of time
bombing of Tokyo. Lt. Gen. William H. himpson*
HOLDEN VILLE. Feb 24 (IP
German jjl Of war will be]
available for work on Hughes and'
Okfuskee county farms for an-
ther three month period under I
terms of an aereemerr stunt'd In !
the tri-county farm labor board l
with the war department thi l
week.
CASH AND CARRY
IMen's Butt*, Ladle*’ Plainer
IDresses and Suits..... I «JC
PARISIAN CLEANERS
C. E. (Fegt Kinley
IPhone 42 15 8. Park
-OdorlMa Clean trig-
WANTED
RECENT DEATH OF
MRS. H. TROTTER
News has reached friends here of
the death of Mrs. Hattie Trotter,
former Sapulpan, on Feb. 7 at her
present home in Tampa. Fla
Mrs. Trotter was teacher at the I
Euchee mission and in Sapulpa city
schools for many years before going '
to Tamps where she was teaching j
at the time of her death.
She is survived by one daughter.
Mrs. W H Symmes of Tampa, and
two grandchildren Her only son,
Lt. Cmdr. Frank Adelbert Trotttr,
well-known to Sapulpans. was killed
in a blimp crash in 1942 at Lake-
hurst. N. J.
Funeral services and burial were 1
at Tampa.
* »• *
Women For
Essential W ork
War Plant
WOULD ANNEX LAND
MIAMI. Okla Feb 24 (UP'—The
city of Miami is ronsiderlng annex- ]
ing 700 acres of land at the north-
ern edge of town Just south of the j
Spartan school of aeronautics.
Need Not Be Experienced
APPLY
A jury is one thing that won't work right when it’s fixed.
1 Mrs J. Vere Frazier. Mrs. Jimmie ,
Wilson, Mrs. Lee Kelso. Mrs Max 1
Herald Want Ads have proved
vueir worth by getting results.
DEAD ANIMALS
REMOVED QUICKLY
HIGHEST CASH PRICES PAID
PHONE | /♦*>
SAPUI PA a w COLLECT
Sapulpa Rendering Co.
Updike Awning Co.
Upcoming Pages
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Sapulpa Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 30, No. 148, Ed. 1 Saturday, February 24, 1945, newspaper, February 24, 1945; Sapulpa, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1525876/m1/2/: accessed April 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.