Sapulpa Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 29, No. 308, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 31, 1944 Page: 1 of 6
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1944.
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entures
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never set*
on prodnch
made in
Sapwlpn by
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yout city.
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• •
LPA HERALD
CV+ee/c (bounty's Only Daily TVews/3np<en
Average Daily
Circulation fa*
July, 1*44,
4109
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VOL. XXIX. NO. S09.
SAPULPA, OKLAHOMA, THURSDAY, AUGUST 31, 1944.
FIVE DOLLARS PER YEAR
RITISH ISOLATE ROBOT BOMB «£UST
H:
cork
he arm]
'• popi
has ea
ricnn \
' tllloil
ch-RHc
REDS HAND
EACE TERMS
ITO BALKANS
NELSfc?* .URLEY OFF FOR CHINA
e i. i9i
battalia
(is t !*C il)j
.hell v,.
leir lath
tons,
nt
1 Romania ard Bulgaria Given
Allied Term* To Conclude
War When They Sign
TO INITIAL SOON
loth Are Exoected To Sign
i||wl Before Week End. Cause
Nazis To Collapse
i captli _____
By J. Edward Murray
" 011 Tinted Press S'aff Correspond-nt
l’1* I 7;NDON. Aug. 31. (U.fii—Bulga-
iu i and Romania received Allied
<"’ i. , terms In Cairo and Moscow
11 mi.iv and probably will sign them
>rJ ' 11 nfnv the week end, collapsing
’ 'Germany's Balkan front.
I; volution breke out In a third
la/i satellite country. The gov-
1 ri' iili^inment of the Nazi puppet state
I Slovakia admitted that entire
nnv battalions had joined revo-
ting partisans and said that It
a., be t: forced to ask Nazi forces
t> "inarch in and pacify the coun-
V
Remits reaching London said
■ ii5 ik patriots had occupied Cadca
7 iirzai on the Siova-Moravian
irder. Fierce battles were said
_ aging around Zilina. most
iportant railway Junction In cen-
il Slovakia, and two other towns
the road from Zilina to Bratis-
da.
\ four-man delegation from Bul-
ria—first to abandon Germany in
)tid War I—arrived by plane in
iro yesterday and was to be
tided the Allied armistice terms
ay by Lincoln MacVeach, Amer-
n minister to the Greek and
go.lav governments in the mid-
east, and Lord Moyne. Brit-
minister of state in the middle
German 19th Army Reels Back
From Hard Blows by U. S. Force
Great Port of Nice Surrenders
Hillman Testifies
S
-y
easy it
home.
>N
:e
NSE
BOUND FOR CHINA where they will confer with Chinese military and
industrial leaders as President Roosevelt’s special representatives,
Donald Nelson, War Production Board chief, and Maj. Gen. Patrick
Hurley are shown above. (International Soundi-'hoto)
Spain Figures Prominently
In U. S. Future Aviation Plans
Envoys Incommunicado
Tlie Bulgarian envoys were held
■mmunicado under strict mili-
■ supervision pending the arm-
,1c. discussions which were de-
Bd again this morning because
^iie non-arrival of MacVeagh
Tlie Bulgarians, headed by Stol-
w) Moshanov, a special envoy,
itUaliy were informed . ol
nt. some time ago and presum
>ly approved them before d»cid-
g|to go openly to Cairo. While
wi believed the delegates would
tec 11 it to negotiate, informed
’Urc said the formal presenta-
on oi terms would be for sign- n, .
■(not *°r bargaining.
Businesswomen
To Hold Meet
Mrs Helen Street, ninth district
the deputy, of Cushing, will b- the
principal speaker at the Business
and Professional Women's school
of instruction which will be held
tomorrow evening at 7 o "lock at
the YWCA
Mrs. Street is a woman of wide
At the pres'nt time she
_ serves as chaiiman of T. B. seals
OAN Rel 'blp sr,urcps in Cairo report- in Cushing and vicinUy. dispenser
t the terms provided that all 0f soldier ballots, vice chairman
)N
lion
IRS
By Charles Corddrv
United Press Staff Correspondent
WASHINGTON <U.P>—Spain is
developing modern aviation facili-
ties and should provide a good
postwar market for American air-
craft manufacturers, in the opin-
ion of Civil Aeronautics Board
M»mber Oswald Ryan, who return-
Germans May Attempi Rally Around Lyon,
But Pursuit Is So Swift and Deadly From
Ground and Air, It Mav Be Impossible
By ELEANOR PACKARD
United F'ress War Correspondent
ROMl'., Aug. 31. (UP)—Victorious American troops,
striking from both ends of the front in southern France, sent
straggling remnants of the German 19th army reeling north-
ward into the Lyon area today and captured, without oppo-
sition, the resort city of Nice on the Mediterranean.
-♦ The capture of Nice, largest of
the French rlvlera resorts, carried
the southeast’ rn point of the Al-
lied beachhead to within 12 mile
of the Italian border. Th» city,
with a imputation of more than
200,0(X) was '(irttyilly undamaged
except In the harbor area.
Nazis Sarrifize Supplies
In the Rhone valley, th« batter-
ed German forces were sacrificing
huge supplies and hundreds of men
in desperate rear guard fighting
in an attempt to delay the fast [
pushing American troops.
Despite heavy losses In fierce
battb.s along the eastern shore
of the Rhone river, a substantial
Sapulpa officers early Wednes- portion of the Germans broke out
day morning seized a Cadillac car *be American trap frem Mon-
at an auto court on the highway tcwniar to Livron and succeeded
between Sapuipa and Tulsa and 19 *n reaching the Lyon area
cases of liquor, whiJh the car The harrasstd Germans were ex-
contained. pected to make an attempt to re- [
The raid was made by Sheriff form their forces at Lyon, a famous
Guy Willibey, Police Chief J. 0.1 Sllk manufacturing center and
Edwards and City Police Officer France’s ithird largest city, and
Van Nelson. The officers had re- bold on to delay as long as pos-
c' ived a tip on the presence of ■‘dble a junction of Allied troops
the whiskey car and stayed at the from nerth and southern France
place where It had been left, watch- The G* rmans apparently hopect tr>
ing for the owner to return. I slaP tbe Allied drive until all their
After waiting for some hours the >*hlts could be withdrawn to a
officers obtained a s>arch warrant Polnt *rom where the; could re-
from a justice of the peace and ‘eat ,n German n-.ii'.er.
forced the car open and found the lA communique from to French
whiskey. interior forces reported that pa-
They had been able to see ex- "dots wer» tiRhtening a ring around '
pos' d bottles Inside the car and Tyon and already had seized sev-
thts they made a basis for their era* points inside the city. The
application for a search warrant communique said the patriots also
After finding the whiskey in the bad captured the town of Bour-
car, the officers contacted Tulsa 8oin. 20 miles southeast of Lyon.i
'<*> ' \
# % * •
Stretch of Coast lOtK2^ s
Long From Which Robots Have
Been Launched is Now Cut Off
Whiskey Car
Is Seized By
Local Officers
»argo of High Priced Liquor
Found in Car Spotted by
Officers in Auto Court
U. S. Armies Pushing North and East From
Paris and Laon Are Drawing Ever
Nearer Belgian and German Line
SIDNEY HIUMAN, head of Lhc C.
t. O. political action committee, i*
shown as he testified in Washing-
ton before a House committee in-
vestigating campaign expendi-
tures. During the hearing Hill-
man clashed with Representative
Church (R-Ill.) after he declared
that the C. I. O.’s political plan is
•‘Communistic engineered from
the top down." (International)
War Contract
Settlement To
Be Explained
Meeting for This Purpose To
Be Held at Chamber of
Commerce in Tulsa
ed recently from a civil air mis- ln an effort 10 ‘he one
s.on io Madrid. Cadillac car. and wer" told it be- , “ ‘7 ^ L,mn
long’d to two men w.io were then >x,lnt carried to Chabeull, within
Ryan was one of three aviation
officials who flew to Spain to sur-
to
six miles of the
■ tion of Valence.
key road Junc-
erm m troops in Burgaria and 01 the Payne County Central Dem-
ulgn rian-occupied territory shall ocrat committee and as deputy of
' di mmed and interned Allied ninth district of the B&PW club,
oop .■■hall have the right to pass As a charter tneir.bf/r of 'he
irouuh Bulgaria and Bulgaria Cushing B&PW club she is a past
in custody of OPA officers,, hav-
vev airDOi ts met'moioeTral rondi- inK been found to have a large 'ilon of Valence. The second force
tion radio communications and iir number of gasoline rationing cou- a.as MrlLlng north of Livorn. at
navigation Si^ afteTthe atate in their pemeaston the confluence of the Rhone and
department h a d concluded an _ rhe na"?es were given as
"agreement in principle" under Samuel Cole Gibson and August
which Spain grams landing rights *]eniT Wrfscbe and both formerly
to American civil aircraft. stayed around Sapulpa. according
He express d the opinion that lo„?°^ c.e Ch ef ?dw^“rds' u
,.o . . ,, . The liquor had been brought
, pan has made an excellent start from California the officers dis- es had been against slight or no
toward establishment of modern covered. The
Drome rivers.
The battle to trap and anni-
hilate the German remnants mark-
ed the first fierce fighting encoun-
tered by the Americans in south-
ern France. Most of th’lr advanc-
lall return occupied Yugoslav president of that group, past state civil aviation and plans are under- which the two had
gasoline coupons opposition.
rrltory and Green Thrace and finance chairman and served as
music director for the Cushing
Thi if*i at war with the United group for several years,
late and Britain. Bulgaria never Mrs strCet, who is at present
ok' o 1 aria.ions with Russia, maintenance clerk of warehouse-
0W« ’.or, Russia joined her wes-
way for its expansion.'
Will Name Attaches
session when
wer» both real
Mrs. Street
maintenance clerk of
man for the state highway com-
ri# allies ln exerting pressure on mission Is a "jack of all trades,"
g('t out of the war having taught school, elocution and
* „IuesdaT Moscow announced kindergarten, served as bookkeeper
Btissia had refused to recog- (or Cushing Packing plant, assist-
r.1Z:.1BU'Ka:LaS d',cla?,'°" of ant freight agent for the Southern
f ieri .tbe 8r°unds that it was Kansas State- lines, was employed
1 „ . , in the enrolling and engrossing
i lie official Soviet news agency department of the liou.se of repre-
u.v vud last night that German aenlatlves dining the 16th lcgisla-
rm> il vessels were using Bulga- (ion and for a period of
lan waters of the Danube and years was a deputy court clerk at
tiUMrlan Black sea ports, while Stillwater.
iulgiirlan troops were continuing Preceeding the school of instruc-
o battle Greek und Yugoslav pa- tion a dinner will be served by the
riots "as if nothing has happen- YWCA board.
In their pos- The Germans were having some
arrestfd in Tulsa success in calvangtng a portion of
applauded by Ryan as one of the with ,he car In which it was found, horses, 20 75-mm^ anti-tank gum
most constructiv- measures taken Later an order was secured from 12 75-mm guns rh / e batteries
for the advancement of American County Judge S. M. Cunningham of field artillery, six railroad guns.
aviatlcn the liquor to be destroyed, and 40 28-mm anti-aircraft guns and
Attaches will be stationed in the turgid waters of Polcat creek eight self-prpelled igidis
London, Lisbon, Madrid. Cairo, Rio received the cargo of high priced than 200 en-mv d-'nd
liquor which had been intend'd
the dry throats of thirsty Sooners
in this part of the country.
Confiscation proceedings arc to
be filed against the Cadillac car,
according to Chief Edwards.
By VIRGIL PINKLEY
United Press War Correspondent
SUPREME HEADQUARTERS. AEF, Aug. II. (UP)—
I he British Second army smashed into the outskirts of Amiens
on the Somme river today, virtually isolating a I00-mil«
stretch of the robot bomb coast of northern France, after
a lightning 60-mile advance in 48 hours.
----♦ By Virgil Plnkley
United Press War Correspondent
The British thrust was reported
In a front dispatch from United
Press War Correspond' nt Richard
D. McMillan as American armies
to the east fanned out north and
northeast of Laon to within 30
miles ol the Belgian border and
90 miles or less of Germany Itself.
Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower, su-
preme Allied commander, disclos-
ed at a press conference that hls
armies already were more than
five days ahead of schedule In
their march across wesOern Eu-
rope and reiterated that victory
- in Europe was possible in 1944 If
The procedure for wartime con- ewyone on the home and war
, .... . . . fronts did his duty,
tract settlement will be explained jje said the Germans already had
lor all war contractors in this lost the cream of their armies tn
area by a team of specialists from western Europe by staking every-
the procurement offices of the thing »n an attempt to contain the
. J , Allied forces in their Normandy
Army and Navy, in a one-day bridgehead regardless of cost ln
conf^*ence tn Tulsa, September 7. men and materials. As the sur-
In the Tulsa Chamber of Com- vtvors pull back into Germany, he
merce dining room. Julian T. Van Predleted. other Nasi forces were
, bound to try to evacuate Norway.
Hook, district manager ol the Dennjurg, Holland. Belgium to Join
Smaller War Plants Corporation, them for a defense of their home-
, has announced. land.
I Sponsored jointly by the Indus- Whole Coast Threatened
trial Department pf the Tulsa The British second army's drive
Chamber of Commerce and the to Amiens, 70 miles northwest of
Smaller War Plants Corporation, Parts and the Seine, threat-ned to
the conference is designed to as- carry qux&ly acrow the Somme
-- sist all prime and subcontractors, riven, last natural del|?nfe line
A near serious traffic accident «"** °r small, to understand the south of Brussels, capltel of Bel-
occurred around 3 o'clock yestrr- Procedures they will have to take glum, and roll up the entire robot
day aft' moon at Dewey and Dlvi- tn Presenting and settling claims bomb coast as far north as Hol-
son streets, when L. E Elston dri- °0 terminated war contracts. land
ving i heavy freight truck for the The governments aim Is to Defense of the area was entrust-
h i' Jpffr»vs lines of Oklahoma achieve uniformity of policy and ed to the Oerman 15th army, which
City, sent the machine into the procedure in setUement of termln- already had been largely drawn
curb to keep from hitting another aUlf°nt';acls' V“u Hook said off to reinforce the now destroyed
car that had turned ln front of “Talk of cancellations and cut- seventh army In the futile attempt
backs should in no way slow up first to hold (the Allies within
The h'avv truck crashed over Mar production." the SWPC repre- they- Normandy brideghead and
the curb and through a heavy wo- se,ltat|ve declared, "for production later to prevent a crossing of the
rnhorlillne n nnnetant III bntnir net _
House Damaged
When Truck
Invades Yard
B. Klingensmith Home
Damaged When Freight
Truck Strike: House
veil wire fenc«' around the yard
schedules are constantly being ad- Seine.
More
Committee chairman for the
|v ninR ate: Mrs. Gertrude Me
Michael, music; Mrs. Laura Grish-
am menu; Miss Pearl Smith, decor
TWO MARRIAGE LICENSES
Two marriage licenses were is-
u> d yesterday from the office of
he court clerk to W. F. Collins,
V. and Evelyn Bowles. 19. both
>f Tulsa, and O. M. Sieale, 45, and conduct a brief business meeting
lydia Sing. 23. both of Tulsa following the school.
Sapulpa-Drumright Highway
Paving Will Start At Once
and Ottawa and later probably in
the Far East, Australia. Russia,
and Ladn-Ainerlcan points.
The attaches, Its was said, will
a*d American manufacturers to ob-
i tain foreign markets ln addition to
keeping the government informed
of aviation di velopments abroad.
The popularity of American
equipment in Spain. Ryan believes,
indicates that there will be a ready
market there. It was panted out
that Spains airline. Iberia, wholly
own'd and controlled
RESIGNATION OF
LOCAL BOARD’S
CHIEF CLERK
ations; and Mrs. Mildred Watford. ! ernment. uses 50 per cent Anferi
program.
en'my
counted In the section.
Prisoner Bag Heavy
theAva?d and^ru"^a rear corner procTernem brathe”' may BrntV'SV'mTem "indicted
ol the stone house tearing one room ca"ceI °"e type of contract, they that the fall of the city, capital
away from the- resi of thi house w111 continue to have the task of of Somme department and one of
and coming to a stop in the back •<>PPPly‘«K the armed forces with the most important railway junc-
other types of production." tlons in northern France, could be
Van Hook said there are 156 expected momentarily.
with SWPC ln Lt Gen Sir Miles C. Dempsey’s
this district which arc equipped to forces probably already have cut
contract for war materials. He four of the six railways radiat-
pointed out that the conference ing from the city, including the
the Doliw*~ station should be of thr utmost Import- last two lines serving the robot
mice, not only to these registrants, bomb coast from Le Havre to a
but to all other firms engaged ln point north of the Somme river,
supplying war materials. Hoon remge
Other conferences designed to The SU!e of the robol8 and thelr
clalrlfy the contract settlement explosive charge would make their
procedure have been at Dullas, movement by highway impractical
yard
Except for the damage to the
Klingensmlth home no mtIou loss ;Jr,tnsj
resulted as no one received the
slightest injury.
The truck driver. Elston's, re-
port filed at
s'-iled he was driving eiv*t on
Dewey when at the Dlvison street
Intersection, another car attempt-
'd to turn into Division in front
of him.
He cut into the curb, he stated
uLo was mu was unable to stop hls heavy Auscust 29; and others are set for and it could b»- presumed that bases
Gb I.lw.tnn Z'ltir Unnt L Nnui t tr _ .....
vehicle until lt had gone through
The tig of"prison"r.”mn'uiiucd to '^1' Elston to
mount steadily on ail front, «nd, t Jn "X.h^urt drWen by
the total now has passed 50,000
American troops also cleaned
Mrs O T. Hutt, of 1018 E. Line
out an enemy pocket at Clark St Ml Til .our. E
nf.Z . k Dewey, wife of the republican can-
_ _ Mrs. Fern Tippin, acting chief
m" Gladysi Lovell.■ P^ldent. will ?nd malil^ DC'2'S riuoninV^arfhas^lg'ned that
Thr Mem *rs Remain
about five miles northeast of Mon- didate'for .resident
telimer. their first big trap They dldatr for prM,dent-
were forced from the village Mon- Mrs Hutt a8ked to be excus’d
day night, but re-took it with little from ln;‘kln« n statement when a
opposition yesterday. Herald reporter talked to her on
French troops pushed along th<- the phone,
west bank of the Rhone, were meet- Klingensmlth told a reporter that
ing little resistance and drove 15 he was very glad no one was hurt
miles north from Bagnols to Bourg “”d that no one was In that part night.
St. Andeol. _ [of th<* house struck by the
OkluhoniH City, Sept. 6; New Or- ai0U(, plated stretch of the
leans. Sept. 12; San Antonio Sept, ccast would become useless as soon
19. and Fort Worth, Sept 21, and Us their present stock of missiles
the one being held tn Tulsa, Sept, has been exhausted.
The Pas de Calais coast farther
north also has been supplied In
part by the railways passing
through Amiens, but it still has
contact with supply depots inland
by war of Lille and Brussels.
Weather
an an- on^pSt^aventw^e^i-mil-^p h°“d_?,V !° t0 “^lude stated mis °mnrnint months’ bhe
Madrid and Barcelona.
figures prominently in three pro-
jected postwar U. 8. routes: New
York M Rome via Lisbon and
three and 6-10 Madrid: New York to Paris via
the junction of Natal, Dakar and Madrid and New
’ Blacktop paving will be started of highway construction. Srf ak-
fcmediaielv on two five-mile sec- man said and will be pushed vigor-
[,„ or the 8»pulp«-Drumaeht »'* tajr'SSSS
Bghway. according to
Euncrmont made. by Rep. Stree- and putting it in as passable a
ei Speaktnan Thursday. condition as funds will permit.
■Materials aiready are being as- The original plans of the state
Binbled by the engineering divis- highway commission called for
In cf the state highway comints- only four miles of paving out of
pn and ttv- actual work will fc- Drumrtght and
unched in September. miles out from
IThe project at this time will highway 66 and 67 Upon notifi- York to Cairo via Lisbon, come
Inprise a five-mie stretch out of cation of the lesser mileage. Speak- points in Spain. Algiers and Tunis
lumrlght and another live-mile man immediately contacted the
"etch beginning at the Junction highway commission and succeed---
highway 66 and extending to- ed ln getting the project enlarged "
)d Drumright on highway 67 to the two five-m'le sections
pccifications of the paving call Final approval of the latter fi£-
bath stretches of the highway ure was receiv'd by telephone to
>i brought up to standard grade Speakman Wednesday from France
with all culverts to be pro- Pans, memb-r of the commission
jy widened and and a four- The five-mile stretch from high-
l gravel base and oil surfac- way 66 was especially grailrying
[laid down. to Sapulpans for. It
_ , -------- . — ----------- ____ truck
____ _______ ......... position because of 111 health, ac- Although the Germans let NIc" at the time of the crash.
The two menu -s of the mission mgi l° armouncement made by go without opposition, there were He Is a retired independent oil
who remained in pain. Civil Eero- rat“!2 board today- indications they Intended to flRht operator. No arrests were made
nautics Admtnlst rtor Otari's I. Mrs TJ!pln; whose resignation bitterly to maintain control of the in case, according to Police Chief
Stanton and Fra* k Novlnger of becomes effective September 1, has mountain passes into Italy. J -O. Edwards
the CAA, reportedly are discussing „?n l3Cal board since Enemy activity was reported In
wAh • Spain officials what cities "ebtuary. 1942, serving principally the Alps and the Of rmans ap- Hr,
nerican planes may land ln, un- as Ur"u tlerk bntll about a year parently were preparing to contact ’
:r what conditions they may land. a8°’ wben sbe took over her i
jniorm safety standards and other int . .
technical matters. ” •*- Stephenson, now county Larch passes
It was established meantime that t"1^sureI, Mount Genavre is n-ar Briancon.
BritLsh overseas airways officials ,!i)pllJ...,°pes [°_ , able ,t0 which the Germans seized two days Down-own Quarterback club
Oklahoma: Fair and warmer to- __
day. Highest temperatures mid- VaeaUan In
die 80s. fair tonight and Friday. Springfield
Little change in temperature to- and Mrs. J. B. Lampton re-
Warmer Friday. turned today from Springfield
where they spent a short vacation.
____________________.________ ________________ siown Quartor
:i what conditions they\nay‘land. JJff* 0ve^ hcL pres: American troop ^rtVculariy'lnThe RarK8 Mp„i Frirlavr
duties upon ihe resignation of areas around Mount Genevre and IvlMl * riu&y
Veteran Of Active Duty
In Three War Theatres
will
Experiences of Cpl. Frank Block, credited with sinking a ship in
The first official ni’etlng of the wbo baisQ beeng a7tne° duf^'ove^'th* Tunlsl*n campaiEn and bomb-
seas' make'T story‘of '.dtenluro, lng 8 tUy ‘n °ld Aufitrla w ,
- rvritvmpnt And d&nupr such ran Hp served on the first ihllttl®
in southemrfFr^ceAm^rch TT JamTlSav^gh^.t ^cl^: ^ toM only of those; who have bombing mission to Russia, from
morning most due east of Montellmar. * cording to Chas. Bartlett. been ln mid,t 01 at ‘on on the *ta*y .^.h**** dl1*Caft{1camoalan
Her successor has not vet been Hrhnnl unri fonitmii nffirdnU u/tii hattlefront back to It-Aly and wears campaign
C.*B appointed “* m’* ror JESS . V 8 army bomber elhbon, .rm .Ur, deurtm* p.ru-
have been In Spain to investigate relul'n f0r further work at the ago in the first reconquest of ter- he held in th^ club rooms of the
the possibilities of extending their “?ard af,er a lcave of abRence of rltcry
FROM OVERSEAS for a thrlhlng fall pigskin seted- squadron, serving as tail gunner c‘patio|j. *n major engagements in
DUNCAN. Aug. 31. (LP) — Two aboard a B-17 Flying Fortress, Cpl. three different theatres ol opera-
r rr-ffij-H
heldh8Monde.y. V'w^nnounce^ ,.me%roT- * and' wTV Uml^'‘in mSm^r- and was rescued8 * P
CUB SCOUT DAY Duncan
CAMP TOMORROW
1 to the large
Cub Scout day camp which was juua A Kail
Hrtutnrd To
Hi, Home
Billy Webb of Oklahoma City
has returned to hls home after a
few days here as guest of his
cousin. Nelson Escue.
♦ ♦ ♦
was point'd Visitfd With
to the collection anfi was
'Zr *nnoun™ ‘“me from Sgt J R Oraythrone s ,
by MrR Helen Penn' den and from S Sgt Jim Sharp who th(> of ...................
k ... . . , . has sent toy dogs from the areus four v,.ars ,l|irl 9(, ve.irs ,, , ,s cp| Hl^ck who took time out il,,d m mbara of the crew were
Slock WU1 include anearlvbrelik- ^ i" "***..£ ‘n.dr-sted in football la . Mlgibf- furtough here for a trip ^ttln ten minutes of
crashed
by Allied bouts -sea about 50 miles from shore and
when hls plane and crew made a af* Allied base at which time the
crash landing at sea. Plane *udk wlthin three minutea
o clock will Include an early break- serveC| ]n North Africa. 81dN and to' be a' member of this aToun We
fast, contest ball game between IO De a menioet oi mi, group wr
Woodlawn and Washington, picnic y »ke for everybody to come to the
--- weekly meetings and tell why they
the completion of the ap- out. this end of the highway run, llilatlve,
paving plan a stretch W through Vveral bad hills wBich Mr Kuthenne* Hoover has re-
oximately 14 miles stIU remains ai« almost imunssable ln wet wea- turned from Missouri where sha.
»- pavi dts Thft missing gap is ther The p#Mnp. will |plv^ Hint spent the past three weeks yisii* atIQld alt'
M i'ii iii ting,, postwar program1 situation. Inga with r'latljg-s. t * Mrs Penn toi
lunch and watermelon feed
Parents of cubs are welcime to
attend the all-day session or any
part of the day's activities. Mrs.
Penn stated
Scouts and parents planning to
requested to notify
tomofrow, •
. » •
to Dallas where he was married th® ?r“b . . „ _ _ ,
to Mi', Gertrude Kohn. formerly ®lock graduate o^ Sapulpa
of this city, left tlBs morning or
high school and Sapulpa Junior
college, was employed in the mold
TWO POLICE COMM CASES think the fullback should have Miami Fla., for realignment, how- ^ q{ ColUm
Glass factory before entering the
I mi rULIlCi » IPI w flizai'1 1 » utiwuvn . iuwiv
Two (a|" #gainst one person kick' d <41 the third down Instead pver. members ol
details of
service.
ting In February.
• • •
were dLsposed of by Judge Kohl- of the fourth or vice versa," he “ble to supply a few
enberg In police court this morn- sakl ...... h H^h^'h^n0awdLl the our- 1M- be took training in the states
ing when Ira Kuhl was fined BIO Bartlett i, especially anxiou to He ha, bten awarded tin pui D._,-------- ____ u,...,.,___
and cost, on a drunk charge ati<! have * good rpresentation of Pie heart for wounds received in
$12 and costs on n chnrge of dLs- citizens at tl* Frldny night meet- action and has won a presidential
curbing the peace. ing. # • • |clU«Uon with Biemben of hto crew
• • • . • _*» ••
at Richmond. Va and Washing-
tom D. C„ oefore sailing to Eng-
laim for overseas duty.
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Sapulpa Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 29, No. 308, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 31, 1944, newspaper, August 31, 1944; Sapulpa, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1527070/m1/1/: accessed May 4, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.