Sapulpa Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 30, No. 49, Ed. 1 Saturday, October 28, 1944 Page: 1 of 6
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Hi
>Rui
ore
>elive
.75
THE SUN
never sets
on products
made in
Sapulpa by
Sapulpans.
Be proud of
your city.
SAPll LPA HERALD
Cree/c (Jounlus Ortliy Daily Nevvspanen^^^^,
Average Daily
Circulation fof
September, 1944
4050 %
VOL. XXX. NO. 49.
SAPULPA, OKLAHOMA. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 28. 1944.
FIVE DOLLARS PER YEAR
. 37c
CHICAGO GETS A BUM STEER
ir? as*
CIO ADMITS
PAC GIVEN
MEMBER FEES
Monthly Assessment On Mem-
ber* Plus $1,000 Goes
To Political Pot.
Nazi Captive
WILD AND WOOUY Chicago looked like the old west when six steers
broke out of the Coliseum, where they are used in the rodeo. The
animals ambled into the heart of the city, causing pedestrians to
scatter in all directions. Shown above, one left a store on Jackson
boulevard and headed toward Michigan avenue. (International)
Central Packed Too Many
Guns For Battling Chieftains
WAR IN
BRIEF
After holding Tulsa’s big Central Braves scoreless for the
first quarter, the Sapulpa Chieftains yielded two touchdowns
in the second quarter and one each in the third and fourth
quarters to lose conference tilt last night at Holme* field 27-6.
Sapulpa s score came early in , ____
the third quarter when, refresh'd*
by the Intermission, they came
back with a fine display of smart
football and marched down the ■
field from their own 35-yard line I
to punch over the marker and
put a chill into the Braves with
the score of 13-6 at that moment;
of the game.
Sustained March
A recapitulation of the touch-
down march by Sapulpa reveals
after taking Owtnn's 35-yard
punt Robbins on the first play hit
around right end for six yards.
Robbins then heaved a pass tc
Scott which was incomplete but
on the next play Scott broke
through the big Central line for
a 30-yard gain. Robbins then
passed to Carroll for 15 yards.
Alter two line bucks had netted
nine yards Scott made It a first
and ten. On the next play the
hard-running Carroll swept around
right end to Central's two-yard
line before being run out of
bounds. Scott bullied his way over
for the marker but the point af-
ter touchdown was no good and
the score stood 13-6 in favor of
Central.
Central's first taont to pay dirt
came after Cwinn caught Sapul-
pp's secondary napping for a sec-
ond and heaved a pass to Coley
good for 20 yards and Coley then
went 18 yards more to the goal.
The kick failed.
Gw inn Around L. E.
Gwlnn again uncorked disaster
for the Chieftains in the same
quarter when he skirted around
his own left end for a to i :hd • n.
INVESTIGATION
Findir^s Will Be Submitted
To Department Of Justice
For Possible Action.
Bv MARY EL1.EN LEARY
Scrtpts-Howard Staff
Correspondent
SAN FRANCISCO. Oct. 28. |
(UP)—Officials and members
of the Longshoreman * and
Warehousemen's union local
(C.I.O.) acknowledged to a
congressional committee that
monthly 25-cent assessments on
members, plus monthly contribu-
tions of *1,000 from the local’s
treasury, have gone to the state
political action commi.tee
The testimony was made b fore
the congressional committee Inves-
tigating campaign expenditures.
“This is the first time we have
discovered anything like this," said
Rep E C Oathlngs <D. Ark.i, j
who conducted the three-day hear-
ings.
The findings will be submitted to
the department of justice for pos-
sible action under the laws govern-
ing election practices, Oathings
said.
During the three-day hearings the
CIO Political Action committee
bore the brunt of the inquiry which
heard officials of several commit-
tees supporting the major parties.
Bridges Testifies
The CIO witnesses ranged from
Harry Brldg's, state CIO director,
and George Wilson, San Francisco
CIO council head, to rank and file
members.
oil men see (j. s. Army Racing up West Side
SHORTENED c ™ v- U— *
war in east Of Samar 1 o \ OKi>homa ies
Naval Victory Will Starve Jap
War Machine For Vital
Petroleum Need*.
H PROBLEM GROWS
Of Luzon; Japs
seeing
Bulletins
/
]
ACCORDING to German radio,
Mr*. Sidney Legendre, above, w ho
went to France as a liaison officer
between the AEF club and the U.
S. Army, has been captured by
the Nazis and was seen in the
Los* Of Tanker* Di*a*trou>;
U.S. Supply Problem U
Better Each Month. _
-- SUPREME HEADQUARTERS,
TULSA. Oct. 28. (UP)— aef Paris, Oct an <URV-Briu*h
Oil men todav in the Empire forces tightened their trap
U.l men saw today in ine ~ 50 ^ 0r morP German* in
smashing deteat ot major un- S0UthWPSt Holland today with the
its of the Japanese navy in the cipture of Bergen Op Zoom, one
Philippine area a shortening of the last two enemy strongholds
t o -f- in the ana. but yielded Meijel in
of the Pacific war desp easl u, a Nazi counter-attack
Japans large gains on the Chinese __
war machine without oil cannot - >nd Berltn reported bombers
keep its many thousands of m<n ’ . •
and equipment in China supplied 1 * '
American submarines have played JUL/,
havoc with Japanese tankers and
for that matter, all kinds of shlp-P other (trgete ,n western Ger.
northwest and south-
British Mosquitoes attacked Ber-
lin twice last night and stabbed
way to the Orman village of
Wallendorf, near Trier. Mrs Le-
gendre Is said to be the first
American woman to fall Into Ger-
man hands. (International)
Roosevelt And
Dewey Make
Election Pleas
Infamous “March of Death” Unit
Of Japs Completely Defeated
Conquest Of Leyte Proceeding
American Patrol Boat* Have Field Day With
Fleeing Japs; 10 Troop Barges Of
Enemy Sunk With 2 Others.
By WILLIAM B. DICKINSON
GENERAL MACARTHUR’S HEADQUARTERS. Leyte.
Oct. 28. (UP)—American invasion forces raced up the west
coast of Samar to within nearly 65 mile* of Luzon and 320
miles of Manila today and Gen. Douglas MacArthur an-
nounced that the Japanese all along the 80-mile Philippines
front were bordering on "complete disorganization and^dia-,
integration." . . • J*7*
Dismounted elements of the first cavalry division already
10 miles beyond Catbalogan. liberated capital of Samar.
after a 32-mile advance in a little more than 24 hours. With
NAVAL TOLL
By JOHN L. CUTTER
United Press Staff Correspondent
SYRCUSE. N Y., Oct. 28. (U.R)—
Gov. Thomas E. Dewey charged to-
wKr awl ^ew “wafshlps ROME. Oct. 28^ (U.R)-Allied un-
to mother these convoys, say oil phlblous troops h*ve occupied the
men, the Japanese supply problem Mediterranean Island of Piscopi*
will not be helped, despite their < northeast ot Rhodes, a communl-
ever-shortenlng lines of communl- Que reported today.
catton The occupation force was land- (he ftld of organised local guer-a
While U. S forces In the Pacific *d on Piscopi by the British cruiser rlllas, practically the whole of 8a-.
are concentrating on Japanese ship- Sirius during the night of Oct. mar third largest island in the
ping of all kinds and recapture 26-27, the communique Mid. Philippines, "is now under our
of the Philippine*, the oil supply Headquarters also revealed that domination." MacArthur reported
problem for Adolf Hitler's war m*- British warships, including the cru- ln a communique I frank TREMAINE
chine grows more acute. An au- *fr Aurora^.cor*. r| The speedy advance carried to PFARL HARBOR, Oct. 28. (IPV-
thoritatlve London source last week Emperor, bombed the Island of Me- w|thin 57 miles of narrow San unofficial toll of Japanese
estimated the Nazi refining capa- los' *n the Cyclades group north of yPrnnrdlno strait, separating Sa- ghl gunk or damaged ln the
city had been cut by 77 per cent Crete on Thursday. mar from Luzon and one of two . .. o{ ^ Philippines rose to-
up to Oct. 1. - ship passages through the central ^ between 40 and ag—includ-
From what It was on may 1 ATHENS, Oct. 28. (UP)—'Lincoln Philippines I t was In San Her- Bve battleships almost cer-
thls year. Tanks and airplanes MacVeagh, United States ambassa- nardlno strait and adjacent wa- tatnl wrecked—and the stage sp-
are the heaviest users of gasoline dot to Greece, arrived by plane tera off Samar that one of ine ^ for a triumphant com-
three Japanes^nav^^ whkh deUUlng one of the
sea victories ln
By United Press
PACIFIC—American invas 1 o n
forces race up west coast of Sa-
mar to within 65 miles of Luzon
while unofficial toll of Japanese
warship losses in battle of Phil-
ippines rises between 40 and 42.
WESTERN FRONT—B r 111S h
empire forces tighten trap on
50,000 or more Germans in
southwest Holland with capture
of Bergen Op Zoom but yield
Meijel in east to German coun-
ter attack.
RUSSIA—East Prussian front
dispatches report Oermans have
thrown several crack panzer and
grenadier divisions into battle
for Gumbinnen-Insferburg gate-
way to Konigsberg and are
counter attacking upward of 20
times a day.
AIR WAR—Mosquito bombers
raid Berlin twice in night and
hit other targets in western Ger-
many.
ITALY—Torrential rains bog
down operations on Italian front
and stall American fifth and
British eighth armies below
Bologna.
Mounds School
Fall Carnival
yjvv iiiuuios uw.v. _ Whiie the enemy's oil problem from Cairo yesterday. It was an- _________ __________
asp mm mmsaammm
our reports, to decide tf such as- a«al™ from dicta- ‘"g approximately 1.150,000 barrels tions on the Italian front, halting ">»«‘ a™rrbV to- ed to the bottom of the •outhChi-
sessmenta and union treasury con- ; uon and contr^ of 011 “ally, an all-time peak. In both the lilth and eighth army J^hT^t TZSl an" * China-based bomber, to
trlbutions are illegal." In a speech oreoared for deliver* addition to a Untied States dally drive from the soilth and east *ard .U,*5 rJuliOn’^'iL brlng the grand total fot the^four-
Gathlngs said he was aware that Qver (h|. b,u<| n\!*work < 11 30-ift averagejast^week ot 4.740, OOObar- aK»inst Bologna
Uttee. not the na- ™on ‘ Vr^Tnub^n »r^- especially, was considered encour- WBS Z Z. na * Adm. Chester W. NlmiU. corn-
national. members “J** Tilriidate rhaUeneed Thlt aging as It repressed a gain of man troops, were stalled ln the ^Tb“nPd0T Leyte ex^pt fo? r.l- mander of U?e Pactflc.
£2 Si^no^eC-1— CWT. from Syracuse Central t*™
tlonal. For the national, members d ■ t, , candldate challenged what »8“‘*
give Individual donations If they Ued thp ..Scarcitv theorie* and near.y
wished.
Broad Powers
"But the resolution setting up
this committee gave us broad pow-
ers to investigate any.hing bear-
ing in the election of president and ="3
vinrpsirti.nl iihrt thi* monev ad- American pr°pte^ ^
1 «usl-v
mountain ranges paralleUliMv^he
*AmerlcanTrces of the fifth army Tme^evWe^e i«n»t
Ul wi( VIIV -------*--
day atr-»ea battle to 43 to 45
________ ______,________ t Per ""I over the 1942 mountains about eight miles south “lda,°“"ar guard resistance. Amer-
shrinking economy of the new deal 0Ui1,ThBr Bologna, while the eighth army lcan ptttrol-torpedo boats, boldly
Further expansion may bring the troops were at the outskirts of infll thp ruinates sea un-
years" and demanded that the na-
tion "go forward and develop the
vice president, and this money ad
mlttedly was being used in con-
nection with the national cam-
paign." he said.
^at*n‘Amerlcan Production to 1,-
«“t American market forouMarm 200.000
The U. 8. dally crude output last
week of 4.740,000 barrels was an
products through Improved diet for
He said threre was "No hope" of
’ achieving such results under the
Roosevelt administration because
'°r the P0V«I 111 achlive anything Ilka
tical action commUtee. . , ^ fofl¥l if
“The contributions and assess- C war ° t0 aget Pdecent farm
Increase of 18450 barrels over the
previous week and only 18.200 bar-
rels below the all-time peak of 4,-
758,000 barrels.
ments here evidently were given
with proper membership vote," he
said.
Rites Monday
For Young
Crash Victim
prices, just as it took a war to get
Jobs," Dewey charged.
He linked the failure to what he
said was quarreling and bickering
over overlapping responsibility as
Kiwanis May
Organize Here
Forll, 37 miles east of Bologna.
Allied headquarters, In the brief-
est communique yet, reported:
"Extremely bad weather during
the last 48 hours brought opera- T,vtP
tions ln Italy to a virtual stand- T,
still."
leaving
MOSCOW. Oct. 28 (U.R>—East leinforce
Prussian front dispatches said
day that
in a navy day speech yesterday
that Japanese losses ln the bat-
H , jo were “so great as to render
dashing Into the Camotes sea un- enemy fleet Incapable of chal-
der cover of darkness, sank ten .
enemy barges loaded with troops *
any sizeable portion of
and two coastal freighters tn Or-
moc bay on the west coast of
:yte.
It was not Immediately clear.
These losses, he said, came on
top of some 600 enemy ships and
3,000 planes destroyed or damaged
v u by the Pacific fleet in the past
however, whether the troops were ’ months. However, he warned
-------- the island or landing to uvp
:y
<EAM
49c
His trip over the goal came after
a sustained march down the field Moundj. high school annua! car-
from Sapulpa s 35-yard line. n<Val held ln the school building
Central s last two markers came d night was attended by a
on straight football with the car- ^aygron^h‘f Students and friends,
rier breaking loose out of a spread Highlight of the evening was the
i ° Henderson at (hp carnlvt, klng Martha Tiger.
^agh tea^ showed vast respect queen, and Haden Savage, king, are
fnf tbS?kflel.l* of each omer membcr.s of the sophomore class.
!°0; St single 'klckoffC was made attendants were the other
ir hminds Farh angled their contestants. P^ggy Gilbert and J.
Lts to the sidelines L Anderson, of the senior class.
Central's final score came from Mary Ellen McDonald and R- L-
a bad break for Sapulpa. Gwinn's Cooper. JuntoT class.’
45-yard punt gave Sapulpa the Btanson and Gene Taylor, {re^~
ball on their own 7-yard line, man class; HeJ.®U Tay,or aT ^
On the first play Robbins heaved Thompson, candidates from seventh
a short pass over the line which and eighth grade,
was intercepted and Central tcok Grand prizes for the levenlng
ever on Sapulpa s 10-yard line, were won by June Brown and Ken-
On the second play Arline, a sub- neth Greer.
stltute back, went through the--
Chieftain line standing up for the ^ productlon during 1943 t0.
taled 469,044,000 pairs, according
The nlav of both teams was to the office of price admlnlstra-
An organization meeting to es-
tablish a Kiwanis club ln Sapulpa
is set for next Tuesday night at
well as Inability to stabilize agrt- 7:30 o'clock ln the St. James ho-
culture on a par with industry and tel ballroom.
labor. Warren Kemsey of Chicago, a
"From the very beginning of the field representative of Kiwanis '
- new deal," Dewey charged, “farm International, has been ln Sapul-
Funeral services for Edgar Ev- programs put forward by the farm- pa. for the past ten days working
erett Bond, 16-year-old youth kill- ers have been set up, only to be with local men Interested ln the
ed Thursday afternoon on the exploited for political profit and forming of a local club. To date
Tulsa highway, will be held Monday t0 ga|n control over the operation approximately 35 Sapulpa men
afternoon at 3:30 o’clock In the oI 0Ur farms.” have signed applications for mcm- j
Landrlth chapel with Rev P. J. As a prime example, he cited btrshlp with the probability that
Conkwrlght officiating. Burial will operation of the soil conservation several more will have applied be-
be made ln the South Heights ce- service, which he conceded "has fore Tuesday,
metery. done a good job ln some part of At the meeting Tuesday night
Acting as pall bearers will be tbe country." at least 30 members of the Tulsa
young friends of the deceased in- riles g(-s prorram Kiwanis club will be present to
eluding: Joe Dillman, Billy Camp- But this program will fall “if helP make definite organization
bell. Melvin Pritchard. Jimmy Cot- lt ls used ^ an excuse for regi- Plans- Kemsey will also be pres-
ton, Billy Burgess and Jackie Me- mentation and wasteful bureaucra- en*-
Intosh. cy,M he warned. He stressed the ^ a recent meeting in connec-
Edgar is survived by the parents, importance of local control to ad- with forming a local Kl-
Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Bond, who re- apt federal programs to local needs wanls club, the following men tirm . f
side northeast of the city; two ..Take for example, a farmer not mel wlth Kemsey Tom Harris, Czech armed forces, said
that the "sup-eme test of fighting
garrison. forces of our weapon*, of our
front dispatches said to- Brin? Liquidated strategy and of national resolve
the Germans had thrown | Gen. Shiro Maklno's Infamous u co^e ln the ycar ahead."
several crack panzer and grenadier Japanese 16th division which mar- ..
divisions into a roaring battle for shalled American war prisoners in . / ' A
the Gumblnnen-Insterburg gate- the "march of death" from Ba-1
way to Konigsberg and they were taan in 1942. already has been
counter-attacking upward of 29 "thoroughly defeated" on Leyte,
times a day.
FLASH
Stillwater A. and M. wa* lead-
ing by a score of 27-19 over the
Golden Hurricane of Tulsa uni-
versity at the half in the game
played this afternoon in Skelly
stadium.
LIBERATION IS
WITHIN SIGHT
defeated
MacArthur said.
He estimated Japanese ground
casualties in the first week of
fighting on Leyte at 14,045, prac-
tical-y half the enemy? entire
strength on the Island, while the
American casualties were 2,160
killed. 139 missing and 1403
wounded.
Nine more towns on Leyte wyre
liberated yesterday, bringing the
total overrun ln the past week to
at least 53. One column pushed
14 miles south from Dulag to
Abuyog, another drove Inland to
within two miles of the enemy 's j
former main supply and troops
(Continued on page 3)
LONDON. Oct. 28. (IP)—Grim
fighting still lies ahead but the
liberation of Czechoslovakia ls
' within sight," President Eduard
Benes, as supreme commander of
ln an
Weather
brothers; James H. serving with the far 'from hereto'sign^' up' wUh E. R Harrison. W L. Seneker. Dr TndeneXTe^dav
U. S. navy in th6 Pacific, Chris E., ^he soil conservation program.’ ^ k- Mullins, Paul Geeteh and P
jr., of the home address, and four Gew(y declared. “Within a period Henry May.
sisters. Mrs. Howard Childress, 0f four months 14 different govern-
Tulsa: Mrs. Wayne Price. Sapulpa: ment agents traveled to this one
Myrtle and Ruth Ellen of the home nme fann of 45 acres to tell how Mine Workers, the Rev. Gerald L.
addrrss. this should be done. Several came K. Smith. America First leader, San
Reportedly Young Bond was rid- many times. When he got all Gerald P. Nye. R, N. D., and Jo- dH„n.„ ald
sv; ss,ci«r.K b?yss sh-s. irv. x - - *• p"*M'nt 01 “*
Oklahoma: Fair today and warm-
er ln panhandle. Tonight fair j
today. and slightly warmer southeast.!
“There must still be stubborn, Lowest temperatures near 50 Sun-
bitter fighting until the last mo- day partly cloudy and cooler In
ment for the enemy ln his blind north.
fanaticism will defend himself \ _j
with unparalleled brutality to the
PEARL HARBOR. Oct. 2S. (IP)
—An nnoffirial compilation from
rummnnlqnes and pre*« dis-
patches from the scene showed
(he following box score for the
battle of the Philippine*:
JAPANESE LOSSES
Sunk—10: •
1 Battleship.
2 Carriers.
5 Cruisers.
2 or more Destroyer*.
Probably Sunk—14 to 16:
4 Battleships.
1 Large Carrier.
4 Cruisers.
5 to 7 Destroyers.
Damaged—16:
6 Battleships.
6 Cruisers.
4 Destroyer*.
Shot down—242 Planes.
Vlil
AMERICAN LOSSES
Sunk—6:
1 light Carrier,
U.8.S. Princeton.
2 Escort Carriers.
2 Destroyers.
1 Destroyer Escort.
Damaged:
"Several Escort earners
and Destroyers.
with a truck.
final score.
Punting Dull
play of both teams
(Continued on page 5)
tlon.
Quarterback
Club Monday
Downtown Quarterback club will
meet Monday night at 8 pm. in
the O. G.&E. club room, it was
announced today by Charley Bart-
taxes for the 13 unnecessary gov-
ernment agents.
19c
lNS
" 25c
UNITED WAR CHEST OF SAPULPA
Date....... ............
In consideration of the services rendered to our fighting
forces and to our Allies by the member agencies of tbe
National War Fund, I hereby subscribe................
($......) to the United War Chest of Sapulpa, payable
$......cash herewith, balance on. ..................
Signature............................
F.D.R. in Farm Belt
By LYLE C. WILSON
United Press Staff Correspondent , , . „ _
ABOARD PRESIDENT ROOSE- Joinders against Oov. Thomas E.
VELT’S CAMPAIGN TRAIN EN Dewey s campaign charges, he told
ROUTE TO CHICAGO, Oct. 28 Hie wilder enthusiastic shivering
Sun Oil Co.
Last night Mr. Roosevelt was
welcomed by a crowd estimated at
50,000 in Philadelphia's Shibe park
after a 45-mlle parade which police
estimated attracted upward of 1,-
000.000 persons.
Cite* War Effort
Firing statistics and scornful re-
Blue Cross Makes Ready To
Mail More Christmas Boxes
Attention at Blue Cross head- Ing a number of club and commu-
dor to the Czechoslovak govern-
ment, said ln a broadcast to the
Czechs that liberation would be
“due to heroic efforts of all their
friends, of Russians armies in the
east and of British and United _________ _________|____ _______
States armies together with their ouarlers ^ now turned to making nity donations,
allies in the west and south " M - - — ------- -----
TO OBTAIN NEW
AIRPORT SITE
1 '•AnvonePmtarestrd ln a re-hash (U.R>—President Roost veit entered ^a'1 P*rk crcj*ri ***t*}|*J|t that we
srswfwu tT »».mi.srs- .rs"
lights of me game ww Darueovu r ...... „ nut——_____L phase." The great crowd scream- envy of the nation" was
___ ______ Because of re-
ready for shipment of Christmas quests the Blue Cross voted not to
boxes to sirvlce men here ln the print names of Individual dona-
states after completing shipment tions, however a list of club and
of overseas boxes on the October community (donations was made
16 mailing deadline. public today.
A dozen or so boxes are ln pre- The list follows: Business and
paratlon now to be sent to service Professional Women's club, *10;
men whose families are Just now Oood Will club. *5: Lewis Meyer
last week will be recalled also, address with a Chicago speech dts-
since the club has not met since cussing tax Inducements to enable
that crame" business to create post-war jobs.
8 _ He speaks in Chicago from 8 to
WHEAT AVERAGE UP 8:45 pm. <CWT) over the blue and
National Broadcasting system net-
OKLAHOMA CITY. Oct. 28 OP) ^ ^ ______________ _______
—An airport that will be ‘the thelr overseas addresses, broadcasts; *21: Mounds, Mrs. Em-
S Visual- _____ .___„ ___n A n» hnorl. ma PrawfnpH nnlWfnr 14' Rovdift.
i , . . „ AVer Seven boxes were tagged at head- ma Crawford collector, *4; Bowden,
lzed today by Steadham Aker, todav with these new ad- collected by Mrs. Anduss, *28.50;
aviation consultant for Oklahoma _________•___l „,in r„Hv *>u>a*i* Prairie Indian ehurch. col-
City. as the city council made
ed Its approval as the president
direct'd Its emotions like a sym-
phony conductor.
He charged Republican campaign-
ers with "deliberate and indefen-
_____ , „„ -.nri., slve" efforts to put party advan-
Vmm TcZT, ■ ««!. ttaUM StS"3,»,T5lS
sr £, ‘Si.nSr.'rs; ^ ns“ jsltirslz ™ jgj
of the train this autumn than in were putting party above patriotism hereafter with a Democratic pres
man? y^ars V^U here show. ln this campaign He speaks to- Went In an effort so set up world
seeding Is virtually completed. confident^
bv WiS-JSffS ^ M
on the enemy IB the entire period ^.n,^h^.L ^nU^three diva emphasized these boundaries were palgn many _donations were
dresses and five others are ready Pickett Prairie Indian church, col-
lor any later A PC numbers. lected by Mrs. Wildcat. *4 60; 8outh
The War Dads qampalgn fer Heights, Mrs. Andrew Nation, col-
money to help finance the Blue lector, *14.75; girls at Bartlett Col-
Cross Christmas project, carried on lins factory, -13 40; nearby oil corn-
through t h e Herald columns, munity, collected by Tom Herman
brought a steady response from and Mr and Mrs. A. J. White
H.nxTL was uiven as the reaLn Sapulpans as well as checks from *38 14; oil community, collected by
tTSJZ a newViuon former Sapulpans now living else- Mrs Paxton and Mrs. Bates. *2750:
The proposed site ls bounded where,
roughly by Walker avenue on the
piellmlnary moves to obtain ne-
cessary land not far from down-
town area.
Encroachment of the west Ed-
mond ell field on the site orig-
inally picked for a new municipal
oil community, collected by
One such check, the last recdv- Kieftr. *14.
Mrs.
na.r rvimar snri wheeler oarks ed In the War Dads campaign, was At a Blue Cross meeting schefl-
TiS^.’A JSETnTS ««»- J
z/?rnom’^ari Harbor to Dec 31, certain Individuals, including pres- eluding what was until three day., empha^Kd the.
M — jd, nl j0jjn l. Lewis of tht United agg the Japanese fleet. ^ i only tentatl e.
1943.
i'
Blue Cross meeting sched-
Tuesday night definite date
for mailing service men's Chrlst-
cam- mas boxes in the states will be
made selected. The boxes are to be tn
directly to the Blue Cross Uiclud-1 the malls by December 1.
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Sapulpa Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 30, No. 49, Ed. 1 Saturday, October 28, 1944, newspaper, October 28, 1944; Sapulpa, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1527227/m1/1/: accessed June 4, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.