Sapulpa Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 30, No. 49, Ed. 1 Saturday, October 28, 1944 Page: 2 of 6
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0
PAGE TWO
---- 5APULPA HERALD. SAPULPA. OKLAHOMA
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1944.
$ATL
SAPULPA HERALD
Established In IBM
<5^^O
Entered as second-class mall matter, September 8, 1914, at the
postoffiee at finpulpa, Oklahoma, under an act of March 8, 1897.
R. P. MATTHEWS...........Owner and Publisher
DELIVERED BY CARRIER ANYWHERE IN SAPULPA.
MOUNDS. KIEFER, BOWDEN AND KELLYVILLE
One Week ............................................. 18 cen“
One Calendar Month ....----.......------------------- 60 Cents
Three Months unust be paid In advance) ------------------ H 2f>
Si* Month* imust be paid In advance) .................... *2 50
One Year (must be paid In advance) ...................... *50°
Al l MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS PAYABLE IN ADVANCE
Three Mouths ____.........---------------—-----------— ** 25
Hlx Months ................................................ <35fl
One Year .................................................. »•«»
A HAPPY HALLOWEEN PUMPKIN
BIBLE THOUGHT FOR TODAY
There is a aoul affinity between good people and theii
maker. Make room in your life for a very lovely friend: If
a man love me he will keep my words, and my father will
love him and we wi!| come unto him and make our abode
with him.—John 14:23.
■— -lO 'O-
WASHINGTON Report
Autumn Vegetable Plate
YOU'RE-TELLfNG
ME!
By WILLIAM RITT
_Central Press Writer_
Collaborator Dies
'Ithm-
This vegetable plate with a meaty And when everything is careful-
flavor is guaranteed to crisp up ly prepared—the stuffing for squash
appetit' ! Ingredients for the "mam cooked to p rfectlon. coffee and
dish meal" pictured above are ac- water accurately measured and the
ron squash, plus a little chopped coffee brew served as soon as It
mi at and noodles, plus a lot of is ready—everybody will fall for
good coffee. this fall meal.
Pearl Harbor's Tragedy
Haunts American People
True Story of Disaster
May Prove Real Shock
By HELEN ESSARY
Central Press Columnist
“IHE WITCH by whom we'd most like to be haunted is !o\ely Dale
Evans who strikes a pretty Halloween pose, above, atop a well
pleased pumpkin. Dale is a vocalist on the airways, but who cares
about her profession? (International)
• WASHINGTON—In many unexpected groups In Washington, you
now come upon discussions of "what really happened at Dearl Har-
"MASTER RACER”
bor?"
What really happened at Pearl Harbor Is a kind of ha'nt that Is
dogging the thoughts of troubled people.
Certainly what happened at Pearl Harbor Is something to bo ever-
lastingly ashamed of. A suspicion thut the greatest disaster that
ever hit the United States and IU fighting forces might have been
the result of a planned negligence, and this Is the opinion some
experts offer, makes the blood curdle with horror.
7.. Admitting that the planned negligence was hon-
estly meant to be small and that the course it took
Fearful WM a fearful shock to the planners, docs not lessen
Shack the recoil from such a suspicion.
An Important national weekly, after months of
worry over what actually happAr .1 at Pearl Harbor, decided to do
a careful piece of Investigating offuts own lines. The weekly put one
of Its best correspondents on the t-tall of the mystery.
The correspondent after anxious Interviews found the truth ns he
had discovered It. greatly disturbing*. He reported his findings to his
editors who In turn were appalled. Much consultation between cor-
respondent and editors followed with the result that the editors de-
cided not to print an article on "yihat really happened at Pearl
Harbor." AJ
They felt It would be very dangeriUs to alarm the people with the
facts they had discovered. Worse, tfie truth about Pearl Harbor as
they believed they had found It tp be would greatly hinder the war
effort. Ami since wc were in tW war, however we got there, there
was but one course to follow—to get It won as quickly as possible.
Among the still unexplained prc-Pcarl Harbor Incidents Is the re-
port made by the aviators who, flying over the Japanese fleet, no-
ticed that no aircraft carriers were traveling w ith the warships
The warships were heading toward Australia. This coincided with
Information given out by the Japanese. But where Were the aircraft
cairiers that no fleet going on an honest business would proceed
without ?
Obviously there was something tricky here. Perhaps the Japanese
were not going to Australia. Perhaps this cruise was a.feint of some
sort.
The aviators reported the significant absence of the carriers. But
did that increase the watchfulness of the guardians of Peart Harbor?
The subsequent destruction of most of the United Stales fleet by the
Japanese best answers that question.
/:
•fl
(4.
NOW THAT the Nazis are
colling all German men from 16
to 60 to arms they might try
drafting a certain corporal who
has been draft dodging In the
neighborhood of Berchtesgaden.
» t {
There'll be no glare, we read,
in post-war auto headlights. But
it will still be there in the eyes
of the pedestrians.
i | ;
Th* guy who shout* too ofton
about "rights," opines Grand-
pappy Jenkins, quit* frequently
gets one —right on tho chin.
! ! !
Among some savage tribes,
according to Factographs. wives
remain silent for as long as a
year, if bidden to do so by their
husbands. What, asks hen-
pecked Zadok Dumkopf, is so
savage about that?
! I !
At a chicken-eating contest,
observes the man at the next
desk, the squawks come before
the bout—not after.
! t I
Horses are staging a comeback.
But not, moans Jockey Johns, the
ones he bets on.
! ! !
Football, regrets a former fa-
mous player, is not the game it
used to be. That's ri ,ht—the
season is half over and we still
haven't run across a single
coonskin coat.
| Past
< gion
• u'cloc
• the 1
m
LOUIS RENAULT, 63, head of the
Renault Motor Co. in Paris, who
had been charged with collaborat-
ing with the Nazis, died in a hos-
pital In France's capital city.
Charged with allowing his auto-
motive plants to be employed in
the manufacture of equipment and
material for the German Army
during the occupation, Renault
was arrested Sept. 23, but was
placed in a hospital after an ex-
amination. (International)
' Sapi
• with
4 Tue:
• with
I
' Woi
• Servl
4 chun
' Bap
• clrcb
• clrcb
• phin
f H< m
• McV
|
• Var
' ing
• Go<
•Mrs.
I
■ PE(
• Clau
tor in journalism, is the publisher.
Copies of each edition are sent to
former students in the armed
forces who request it, but this
special edition will be mailed to
ull ,who have attended Sapulpa
high, it was stated.
Scientist Scoffs At
gambled away a small fortune In
securities. The marriage is a farce
but Job endures hts frivolous
wife's infidelities. He accepts the
coldness which Fanny displays to-
il ard their baby girl.
Job and hts daughter leave Fun- ‘CnlrT
ny to her vanity and her suitors vBlHGrnia S
The years slip relentlessly by. Her - —
daughter makes her appearance LOS ANGELES, Calif. (IP)—
to make an embarrassing teoti- California's record cool summer
mony as to her age. Then Job does not mean that the state Ls
returns and in the fashioning ol headed for an ice berg, according
the powerful denouement of this to Dr. Jakob Bjerknes, Interna-
Arrive
|ftr in
Mtv
Irnatc
*r.s Ir
sft< rn
ficr p
3 Ga
Mr
ifig at
3a ge.
»ngri
irrive
W< oks
Week
II
Mr
M thi
uui i
fOi me
Mill
Tulsa
tragi-coniedy, a significant point
ls made.
Other actors in the picture in-
tlcnal authority on meteorology,
of the University of California
Answering weather worriers who
elude Walter Abel, Richard War- feared a change In the state’s cll-
ing, Dorothy Peterson and George
Coulourts.
School Paper
To Uniformed
Former Student*
com-
Epic of Carrier
At Criterion
0
• CONVERSATIONS OVERHEARD—
At the Army and Navy club: "Aud what really happened my dear
wag this-Tommy actually hitch-hiked from Saipan in live days. In
five days!
"He had the most remarkable luck. Just happened to thumb a ride
here and there In a plane. When he got to London, he met an old
friend who squeezed him Into a bomber. And the next thing—there
be was home again."
In a taxicab: "Can you remember when chicken used to be a treat?
Imagine that—chicken a treat! I have to do a lot of traveling. And
I’m so sick of chicken I get nervous indigestion as soon as a waiter
hands me the menu card. Maybe I wouldn't mind so much if it
weren't always the same chicken. . . . Sometimes it's
cooked pale and w atery. Sometimes it's burned to
shoe leather. . . , But It's the same chicken, every
time!"
At one of those packed In tables In a hotel dining
room: "What confuses me Is that the hotels and
rlubs seem to have plenty of butter. I asked one hotel manager what
he did with the butter that was left on the guests' plates. He said ho
Just threw it out. And wc housekeepers have to sell our soul for a
quarter-pound of the stuff. . . . Sometimes I think Washington is
Lhe most rationed town in the country."
pBM'EWS otm
. .. n n/sa /L4PAJ •: ._L-4
/y c m ‘A A/D ^ O MEN
• . * /A/ UNffONM
Tex , in the
school, has
A Beef
About
Rationing
PROMOTED TO
hunting. He claimed he knocked CAPTAIN
| oul two German tanks. First Lt. Leon W.
Kirchhclmcr reported a new turned at Childress,
kind of German formation was bombardier-navigator
appearing, the so-culled “panzer been promoted to the rank of cap-
brlgndr." Remnants of the old di- tain, according to Information re-
| visions which numbered 180 tank-; reived by his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
were broken up into brigades with wade Purdin.
24 to 30 tanks and 3jp>0 to 7,000 ■ — —
i men The personnel was made up c.RAV
of odds and ends ft m various PROMOTED
shattered and dismantled outfits private First Class Ray A Gray
The Germans were using nils- of n41 E)lsl Hobson. Sapulpa. re
From out of the glory of smash-
! Ing victories our navy fliers have
won in the Pacific, from the
i hearts of the gallant men w hose
home Is a flat-top. comes the
! screen's first drama of our carrier
force in action — Wing and a
Prayer, the Story of Carrier X.
The thrill packed epic, featur-
ing Don Ameche. Dana Andrews,
j William Eythe. Charles Bicklord.
and Sir Cedric Hardwicke. opens
at the Criterion theater with to-
night's prevue, showing through
Tuesday.
The film tells the story of an
unidentified aircraft carrier which
in the early days of shock and
confusion following Pearl Harbor. _____
was sent into Jap-infested waters , ,__, __
Orderly toia£aed with 'SdSfui «2hl SSS sallow.'albeit beau-
°old conlCat to run away 'and Jiful woman which Bette Davis
, not fight back, this bewildered JtLm*1 „fSkt h*
force of navy fliers are forced to [*"*'h enJif^P* piii hoth “ 1 is
ovprvthlnc the Jims cun nov<*l ElizabPtn L.
I J? t ihpv urn saW to be the most important
'h™“ S y .characterization this accomplished
With the trap set and orders artr*J® has yet *rou*ht t0 the
to avoid combat rescinded, the day screen-
of revenge for Carrier X arrives Mr Skeffington" comes to the
p.nHin d! How that revenge is won at the Yale theater with tonights pre-
i uimn. mu- hiMor,c batUp nf Midway makes vue show, continuing on through
for the most thrilling climaxes | T uesday
mate because July, with an aver-
age of 66.4 degrees, was the cool-
est July since 1880, he said there
wasn't a lick of truth in the ru-
mor that the building of the
Alaskan highway or the tamper-
ing with the Japanese current by
the Japs caused any kind of wea-
ther—cold or hot.
Dr. Bjerknes, who has studied
California weather records for the
past 65 years, said there was no
significant trend toward a cooler
climate. The people who think so.
he added, simply suffer from lack
of memory.
"Actually, since 1916, we have
had fewer drops to low tempera-
I pre-
The Christmas Greetings
mlttee of the Sapulpa high school
wants the correct address of all
former students of the school, who
are now in the armed forces, Mrs.
Opal Hellewell, librarian, stated
today.
“A special Christmas edition of
the 'Smoke Signal.' high school | tures In the summer than In
paper, will be ready for mailing to vious years."
the uniform'd next week and lt -
is important that we hade the TWINS ON SAME LIB
correct addresses," Mrs. Hellwell _
... . ... WATER VALLEY, Miss. (UR)—
The committee requests that the . ’ . on
___i„t„ h* nrint- When the Crumby twins, 20-year-
complete. correct address be print- ^ “ns 0f M and Mrs W H
-a. typed or painty written gL^o? W«et J .t,V,
sent to the Christmas Greeting
school immediately.
"Smoke Signal," ls
the official
1
Fine Character
Study At Yale
Crumby of Water Valley, go
the Nazis, they get them "a-coming
and a-going." Assigned to the same
Liberator bomber In the European
theater. Staff Sgt. Wallace F.
'the00slh^rUchcCeachPmomhd It Crumb>"' nose gunner on the 8hl»'
contains news of all
and interesting items concerning
well known school personalities.
Miss Elizabeth Reynolds, instruc-
i
school events gets lhem comin8’ and 8«'
scnooi evenis Hpllis E Crumb, y> lail gunner,
gets them going.
ever to blaze across the screen
“The Sullivans”
At State Tonight
Miss Davis plays the part of
Fanny Trellis, queen of the years
immediately fallowing the first
World war. The fabulous Fanny,
later Fanny Skeffington. struts
cut her life in a moving account
of the times. Her rococo, post-
Victorian parlor ls the gathering ,
spot for 1914 society—for women
"The Sullivans.” starring Thom- __ ____
as Mitchell. Ai*ie Baxter, Trudy wbll comc to stare and men who
Marshall and a host of other Kl lb(,r to bask in her beauty.
life. |
ccllaneous transport including vp- cently was promoted to that grade
hides appropriated from civilians at Bergstrom FI Id. the first troop screen players, comes to the State Job g^n^ton enters her me.
and they were great at tmprovi- carl|er command's combat crew re- thruter with tonights prevue, and , soft-spoken but powerful figure
tank-s commanding officer. till the time they were called to ;ivirpj Treppy. and Treppy has
—-- Pfr Gray's par-n s, Mr. and Mrs.! serve their country in the armed
_____ O, M. ( t forces Tt>*'ir undying loyu
Milk 'Em To
Capacity
A complete, ready-
to-feed 16% grain
ration, lust the feed
for lots of milk.
Feed Milk Chow
Observer Says
German Tank
Losses Higher
140
LOCALS
Hobson. Sapulpa
'fiJillWHL11 ii.i IjBBj*1 'iiP^l i* 1
large artillery pieces.
Ahead in Mobility
Kirchheimer rated American
tanks superior In mobility mid
the ease with which the tanka
could be operated Normally the
American armor was supported by
artillery as lt
the Germans to keep their hutch- ^ UV”monUi*.~Bft« pleading snatched a
co closed, handicappiug their op-'
eiatlons. The air forces often pro-
IIRIVEK-POLICEMAN ALERT
leach other, their family and their
[country Ls portrayed in a gripping
! screen story-
wit h
FORT WORTH. Tex (UP) J H.
Hill put both tils vocations into
practice and nabbed an ex-convict
for theft. Hill, who drives a local
CASES ON CITY
DOCKET THIS MORNING
James B Statin, charged
. . carrying a concealed weapon, was bus when off duty at the police
Bdiancea.^ forcing fme^ jiqso and costs in cit\ ixilice station, caught the man af cr be
woman's purse and
gutity to lhe charge. He was re- jumped from the bus.
leas' d upon payment of fine. -
Lighter Rail Tickets
Are Saving Paper
support, notably the
their machine guns
Woodrow W Evans, charged with
being drunk, was admitted to the
city jail aifer falling to pay fine
set at *10 and costs.
Bonds of $5 each for passing in
SPINACH ONLY CASUALTY
WASHINGTON. Oct 28 UP)—
German lank losses In France close
consistently were greater than p-47 with
those suffered by American arm- a*'d bombs.
ored forces, due not only to supe- "The Germans were scared to
riority of the tanks themselves dfr.th of cur tanks. Kirchheimer
but superiority of allied tactical said. German prisoners'
air support and artillery. Maj. Popped out as they watched our
Joseph M Kirchheimer. who serv- tanks and self-propelled artillery
ed with both the fourth and toll by
sixth U. 8. army divisions, de- Losses In both tames and men
clared here were low In the two divisions ho
Kirchheimer. ground forces ob- was with. Kirchheimer said Many
server toid newsmen at the Pen- tin fourth 01 i .ion tanks HglH-
kn r ^^ ••
CHICAGO UP' -Railroad tickets,
as well as trains, have gone
I streamlined.
L J. Ahlering. purchasing agent
for the ChtcdRo A’ Eastern Illi-
nois railroad, announced that the
| road has cut down the weight of
cardltoard tickets from 6-ply to
2-ply lr cooperation with the pa-
salvage campaign and has
HOUSTON, Tex (UR)—A bull’t
........ ... — -----— ,------ came through the door of a Hous- ,
J... school zone were forfeited by Mass ton grocery store and no one knows PC-riv ririuoed i's'r. mer ticket
M Achley. Mrs, John Chance and where lt came from The bullet P,insUmp. llin by two-thirds. A
[ large saving also has been effected
Burt Granger.
BABY SON BORN
THIS MORNING
Lt. and Mrs. Charlei H.
man announce the birth of
Just missed some of the shoppers,
and flattened a can of spinach
against the wall, spraying spinach
Juice around Poltc' reported that
Hart- a man had been seen running away
a son from a nearby tavern Just a few
hPd new engines n:id new tracks Lt Hartman is stationed at Wala the only clue to the stray bullet.
in weight and storage space
Cm the other hand, it has been
necessary to warn ticket arm’s
against the danger of passing out
two tickets for one, because of
their shrunken thickness.
Kirchheimer said the Germans Wala. Wash,
feurth armored division, support-
ed by artillery, knocked out 45
German tanks near Arracourt on were always frightened when they -v
u,AnS“l."iS t =SEE RALPH STROUP
FARMERS
SEE US FOK
YOUR NEEDS
Hammermills
Er.silage Cutters
Hammermill Belts
MILKING MACHINES
with either Gasoline or
Electric Motors
Tractor Tires and Tubes
Pumps Pump Jacks
—-and many other items—
_ ____|| forwarned
tlllery three. American losses were pending artillery action
three tanks and three TDs ulti- F-mser' Brigades _
nmtely salvaged He recounted the legend, which =
The" fourth division up to Sept hi sa*d he could not vouch for =
27 destroyed 400 enemv tanks, personally, how the pilot of one =
captured 15,000 prisoners, killed hason plane, tired of Inaction, fas- =
6,000 Oemians and knocked out toned three bazookas under each
1,600 miscellaneous vehicles aud wing of Ills Cub and went tank ==s
= For Auto. Fire, Burglary, Life
INSURANCE
I'll Save You Money
(Surety Bofidsl
Representing
State Farm Ins. C’o.
612 south Maple
SPECIAL
OFFICE HOLDER S BOND
for 1 erm. Save I5',e
RALPH STROUP
INSURANCE AGENCY
512 S. Maple
ATfibst
SION OF A
SAPULPA
MOTORS, INC.
Dealers for
Ford Tractors with
Ferguson System
215 S- Main Sapulpa, Okla.
Prepare Cows for
HEAVY MILKING
Special-buill feed
|ot dry cow and after
freshening Gives
'em a head start.
DA F COW CHOW
Poise ’em on Calf
STARTENA
One hag replaces
40 gallons milk
Helps grow big,
vigorous calves.
Thorpe In
Strong Race
Dairy Rinse
‘.■VjVi',
31b. can makes 500
gal. effective solu-
tion. Keeps equip-
ment clean and
sanitary.
Purina Chlorena
Get Them All At
SAPULPA
FEED
100 N. Main Phone 1000
We Give Vouchert
Bristow Man Asking Elec-
tion as County Treasurer
O. D. Thorpe is receiv-
ing strong support in all
sections of the county in his
race for county treasurer
political observers reported
this week.
Thorpe is particularly
well known in southern
Creek county as he worked
in the mercantile business
for John Bishop for many
years and for the past four
years has been employed
at the Community State
hank.
He is married and has
two children and is a home
owner. This is his first try
for public office and he
won the Republican nomi-
nation last July with a good
vote.
Thorpe will appreciate
the vote ahd support pf all
citizens who believe in
good, efficient county gov-
ernment operated with fail*
ness to all.—Adv.
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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/m1/2/: accessed June 10, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.