Sapulpa Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 28, No. 243, Ed. 1 Wednesday, June 16, 1943 Page: 1 of 6
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UNITED
The Only
Daily Pape* hi
Creek Couaty.
Full Leased Wise
Service.
fSAPULPA’S ORE/uEsT NEW3PAEg1n* *
Anrift Dliji
Circulation far
May, 1*43,
3242
VOL. XXVIII. NO. 243.
SAPULPA HERALD, SAPULPA, OKLAHOMA, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 16, 1943.
FIVE DOLLARS PER YEAR
BEAUMONT RIOT Allies Produce Almost 2
QUELLED; MOB
SOUGHT NEGRO
Accused Attacker of
White Woman Hunted
by Infuriated Texans;
Officers Take Over.
Times As Much In Arms,
1 War Supplies As Enemy
Bv Jewel Spangler i that, while no accurate gauge of Rus-
Unltecl Pers* Staff Correspandent ala output Is available, the Soviet total
WASHINGTON. June 16 <U P>—The Is about the same as Oreat Britain's.
'United Nations are producing *125,- China's production, he admitted, Is
000.000,000 worth of arms and war "pitifully small."
supplies a year—almost double th*. The war production chief praised
Axis rate of 165.000.000,000 both management and labor for Amer-
ThLs comparison of Allied produc- lean Industry’s achievements He said
tive might with that of Germany, neither strikes nor absenteeism, al-
Italy and Japan was preseted to a though he did not condone them, had
COAL MINERS
ARE AWAITING
WLB DECISION
Operators Have Formu-
lated Front Against
Lewis As Unravelling
of Tangled Contract
Issue Proceeds.
By Raymond LaJir
United Press Staf. Correspondent
materially affected arms output He
added that absenteeism "Is being lick- WASHINGTON, June 16 (LP>— Ap-
ed." 1 palachlan coal operators reformed
Nelson told the subcommittee he was t^eir united front against John L
confident that within the next year today and awaited a war labor
. _ _______ every small business which can be ij^d decision which they evperted
persen a mob of neatly 100 men who the board of economic, warfare that used effectively will be at work In the w ,ui^ rPt,uff the United Mine Work-
Asks Gas Power
BEAUMONT. Tex , June 16 (U P)—A
blg-hatted Texas sheriff, with a sub-
inechine gun slung across his arm.
today quieted a mob of white men
demanding Information of the where- house appropriation subcommittee by
abouts of a suspected negro attacker, War Production Board Chairman Don-
when he offered to fight them one at aid M Nelson In testimony made
a time and told them to go home or public today.
back "to building ships' The same subcommittee heard tes-
County Sheriff Bill Richardson dls- timony by Director Milo Perkins of
Talk Of Allied Invasion
0 OKLAHOMA mSTOWCAS •' ^5
\Var Nerves Grow Tenser
■ /
surrounded the county Jail demanding "our economic strength Is still rising war production program
that the sheriff tell them where peacp while both Germany and Japan are be- Emphasizing that the civilian econo-
officers were searching for a youthful ginning to show the first signs of eco- my must be kept healthy, if lean, he
negro yard worker, accused of attack- nomlc strain.” demanded a free hand in meeting clvi-
lng a young white mother of three NcLson said (nat American military Han production problems and strong-
children i Pft’df'.iioh will reach a peak rate of ly opposed legislation, passed in the
',*0.0 0.000,000 a year in 1944 He add- senate and pending in the house, to
ed that it will be held at that level create a civilian supply agency inde-
Tm damned tired of all this." Sher-
iff Richardson said, as he moved oUt
the door of the jail and stO'^u befcir until the Axis Is crushed. Coupled pendent of the WPB
the mob A sub-machirgun rest- with other Allied production. Nelson
ed on his arin _ ,said. "that ought to be enough to
All right, boy,,"- he said. "break up swamp them (the Axis nations', and
■Whether we like it or not we are
in a managed war economy.” he said
•We must direct the flow of materials
prs again
The breakdown lr. negotiations be-
tween Lewis and central P -nnsvlvania
operators, who bolted the Appalachian
conference last week, threw the Penn-
sylvania group back in line with the
other producers although they made
no .ormal move to reunite
The UMW's policy committee meets
today tc receive a report on the new
breakdown and other developments in
Stabilized Food
Price By Autumn
Sought By Brown
By Fred Bailey
United Press Staff Correspondent
j By United Press
I Russia today confirmed German re-
ports of brisk fighting on the rim of
the Orel Salient midway between Mos-
i cow and Khrakov. hinting that It might
develop Into a major operation, while
the Allies and Axis fought an Intense
war of nerves over western Europe
Moscow dlspaches said the Red army
attacking north of Orel In some force,
crossed a river and penetrated the
WASHINGTON, June 16 (IP)—Price German positions to some depth and
Administrator Prentiss M Brown told was holding its gains against counter-
the senate banking committee today attacks after three days of hostilities,
he was ’hopeful" that the prices of A Stockholm report that Russian
cost-of-living items can be stabilized ar*H German representatives had met
at Sept 15, 1942.
$450 noo 000 a year
levels with only *n vicinity of the Sweedlsh capital
in rollback sub- to talk of peace was denounced at once
by the Soviet ambassador to Sweden
as a Nazi propaganda plant
Britain's King George was reveal-
ed to be on a flying visit to North
Africa, from which a powerful Allied
air offensive had swung against Sicily
now and go Qa back to building ships I think our Job should be that—Just Into the things that arc most needed f^rir vruge dispute, and perhaps to
Ilk*' you „noul<t be doing." {swamping them.” In prosecuting the war and in keep-
Most of the men were from the | And while the nation Is productlng lng up a sound civilian economy
B'^umont shipyards, and had walked $90,000.00*).OOd worth of war goods. Arthur D Whiteside, director of the
away from their Jobs when the search Nelson said In describing the giant' WPB's office of civilian requirements,
for the negro began last night, a strides taken by Industry in recent told the committee that his agency
search which ran into street fighting years, It also will be producing $90,- Intends to exercise stricter supervls-
and rioting in the negro sections of 000 000.0 0 worth of goods for non-war Ions over the government's various ra-
purposes tiontng programs The power to ra-
Nelson estimated British war pro- tlon originally was invested by presi-
and added1 (Continued on Page Twoi
duttion al $20,000,000,000
the town
Someone In the crowd of men shout-
ed :
"You negro lower"
Richardson moved a step forward
the damn'd fool that said that
step up." he shouted "In fact. I’ll
take you all on—one at a time "
"Let rjg tell you." the sheriff added,
"I’m going to keep order and law in
’.nl* county."
Someone else shouted that Rich-
ardson’s statement was Just politics ' .
Richurdson replied that the mob had ^Ir a,'d MJ1S ® ~ ° a
already hindered the capture of the | at ^ M Bl.,Bn
negro by last night's fighting which, celebrate Path , day 6unda>. but
Richardson said gave the negro a 15. - ako theh sixUet.i weddmg amuversai)
I ,nrt I Mrs McCreaij did no! h«*!»*tt«.e $0
sa|d -took up all »*y that she woultl be 81 In November
were
being held Guardsmen
(Continued on Poge HUi
STjSn“V« «« - hu^ua will * « moaa-
to ke.D ardor”. • T,le>' -sald the> '<u^d riHfbrgte theH
Tenseness seemed to relax after Rich-' a"™v,'r'sar> by havm« a11 *£** *
ardson had spoken to the crowd The their children come here They have
mob dispersed, although Texas state -seven children Mrs J A Reagte. Mrs
guardsmen continued to surround po- ^ E taught ^r' .. , , 1
lice headquarters’where several of 75 i?.nd. Fli'd ^ M< Creary. a « P pa
— « T"“- SIS, oTS£S^dc!f“4
Hazel Dietrich of Ohio In answer to
11 question about thdr family. Mrs Hc-
I Creary said that they are very proud
1 of them all.
Donald Ray McCreary, their 12-year
old grandson, has made his home with
his grandparents sUice the death of
his fattier when Donald Ray was one
1 year and a half old The McCreaya
said they are never lonesome with
j Donald around
1 The McCreary* were married one
j Sunday evening. June 20. 1883. In a
_ —. n 11 *nu-n in rthin n
SAPULPANS TO CELEBRATE 60th
WEDDING ANNIVERSARY SUNDAY
Faulty Rationing
System Criticized
decide whether a n*v work stoppage
in the coal fields will follow expiration
of the present worknu truce at mid-
night Sunaay. The WLB. delayed in
reading the decLston may not release
its ruling until tomcn >.v or Friday
The collapse of negotiations with
the central Penns. Kama operators
erased the stategic victory Lewis won
last week in breaking the operators'
solid front The UMW had hoped
other operators would fall in line and
accept the tentative tvreeinent reach-
ed with the Pennsylvania group In-
stead. the remaining operators did not
yield and conlerences with the Penn-
sylvania producers broke down over a
technicality That breakdown, how-
ever. may have repr < nted a strategic
move by the union
Charles O'Neill, president of the
Centra! Pennsylvania association, no-
! tifieri
GASOLINE RATIONING power, now
held by the Office of Price Admin-
istration, is sought by Secretary
of the Interior Harold L. Ickes, he
reveals in testimony before a con-
gressional committee, above. Ickes
also said that stricter rationing of
gasoline In the midwest at the
present time would not alleviate
eastern shortage. (International>
or «i roo . — -----o-—— —j
' ' , (and Invasion talk rose to a new high.
Tht Northwest African air force
King 01 England
Visits No. Atrica
sidles.
His figure was more than *1.000.-
OOd'iOO under th» lowest stlmate Pres-
ident Rosevelt gave a press confer-
ence yesterday. The president esti-
mated ro.lback subsidies
out 000 to $2 000 000.000
Brown said his figure was sug- threw planes of all kinds—flying for-
ge* ted on the condition that there be tresses. Wellingtons, lightnings, Mitch-
no further Increase* in the cost of ells. Marauders and others—Into a
production. That, he added, would in- stepped up assault on the Axis alr-
clude no further increase in the cos, dromes In Sicily, strategic Island se-
rf producing coal, for example such parated from the toe of the Italian
as might result if the wage demands boot by only two-mile water gap.
of John L Lewis, president of the Gathering tension over the Mediter-
United Mine Workers were granted ranean fed on both Allied and Axis
Members of the committee, consid- reports of war developments expected.
! erins attachment of subsidy restric- in progress or consummated. Inva-
{ tions to a bill extending the life of tion-jittery Axis broadcasts professed
rhe commodity credit corporation, to expect an Allied blow at any time,
challenged Brcwn on the difference In and some Allied accounts suggested
I estimates. that a brew of bad medicine for the
Thev pointed out that Richard Hil- Axis might be coming to a boil,
bert Brown's assistant In OPA. testi- Flrst report* of King George's visit
fled earlier that the $450 000000 pro- "frth Africa failed to suggest Its
gram now contemplated would reduce significance They told merely of his
tlu cost of living only II per cent Amed_ian,dLsea. and_air
TOl K OF INSPECTION CROWDED "h're^,hp burpm‘of la'^,r^Ls^s Brit?m “during hlTcountry1s^o^ yearn
INTO A EEW DAYS TAKES 'how costs ha'e Increased ap- Qf waf
IIIM MANY PLACES Pr^m^te1*' 5 per cent since Septem- bombing of Slcuy wafi mtensl-
- rj ....... tied and put on a virtually non-stop
_ Brown said he estimated that basis by the Northwest African air
ALLIED HEADQUARTERS North aro ind three per cent of the tnerease forces after they and sunoortlBg plane*
th.(' ??r laBor ^>oa.r_d v5?'!e_fy Africa. Jun. 16 IP Kmr Ororse TV resulted from black market operations tTom Malta and the middle east com*
that he had been unable to acne with of Eneand haf m North Africa which he believed would be eliminated mand had plugged repeatedly at the
Lewis over a clause to prot*^! the Saturday nsiting the scenes ’ - J *-
DEPTTY PETRO CHIEF DAVIES
ASSAILS GAS SHORTAGE AND
BLACK MARKET
By Janet Madison
United Perss Staff Correspandent
operators again.*-' legal claims for
underground travel pav
O'Neill and Lewis had agreed on
$1.3C dallv to nvet the union's de-
mand for portal-t -poruil pay for un-
derground travel time. The i-perators
ot the allies greatest victory and talk-
ing with the soldiers and sailors w-ho
won it.
The news of his visit was held an
official secret until today.
The kings inspection tour, crowded
r
S&ound
Jo
Jh
L'
>y^bout
e uoivn
Bv tRuMrt C«tr*«ll
WASHINGTON. June 16 (UP'—De-
puty Petroleum Administrator Kalph
K
Insisted that the union should guar- (ntc g fpw {jay t., g bim Into a num- r’anrly spiralling prices and stabilized
antre the operators jyermanentlv ^ 0j differen* British and American wages
aenins’ claims which might be
trought under the wage-h-.ur law for
Davies blames the estern gasoline travel time before last April 1
shortage and black market operations
on a faulty rationing system
Davies, whose agency Is seeking
control of gasoline and fuel oil ration-
ing recently told a house appropria-
tions subcommittee In testimony re-
leased today that both the shortage
Lewis refused, however, to make any
such guarantee effective. The oper-
ators replied thev wanted a perman-
ent settlement, not a postponement.
of the Issue
Although he re-, oaled that the op-
erators sought protection a:ainst
military establishment*, aboard war- Murray insisted that food prices
ships through convalescent camps could be rolled back and prices «tab-
and even to a beach where more than Hired through subsidies without In-
3.000 troops were having a Sunday Jury to producers, processors or dis-
swlm trftutor».
Tlie visit to the beach long will b> Brown said it would be impossible
remembered The men caught sight to carry out the price stabilization ac*
, small town in Ohio called Sycamore
The Rev William Hargis sevlew of Mrs McCreary was Mattie Flanders
The Robe here the other night was before her marriage
one of the most Impressive and de- made lhclr (lrst home in Ohio
lightful pieces of where ah of their children were born
In many moons Embracing the mood
of the book—he swept through the
narrative of the story with preeLse
timing and presented the sacred story
with a reverence that was both cap
tivating and Informative
Oh joy—oh Joy1 And that sut™ up ^ls family later returned in 1914
the feeling of the mob of girls here Uiifriri hls retirement McCreary
early today who set
siege of outdoor life
From there they moved to St Claire.
Mich , where MeCleary was in the oil
business He was influenced to come
to Oklahoma by some of the con-
tractors he had waked for.
The first time McCreary came to
Oklahoma was before statehood He
off "for "another hLs retirement McCreary had
at Camp Scott
up til the hills of the Ozarkv They aWBrded a badge for being in the
O CIOCK. on ineir #«*• *n mum- vmt*
worked In tht oi\ field»s for 50 years
At the first oil reunion in Tulsa he
were in Tulsa by 7:30
wav shortly registered
In camp by
oil business for so many year.*
rand when the last detail of their her husband stays right by her side
equipment was packed in their duffle and takes very good rare of her
bags—were their mothers relieved!' 1 The McCrearys are both mambe i
_ | of the Christian church
. , , . When asked what particular thing
The mad scramble for shoes ended coulcj ^ contrtbuted to their happy
yesterday - although some very funny, mBrnaK,. Mrs McCreary replied that
very funny request* lingered on At ^ of vlPw,xiint and under-
the last minute In practically every t ndju„ between them had done the
wtore in town—women bought shoei * ------ ••■■---■
and the black market could have been prior claims for |>ortal-to-port .1 pav
prevented "if there had been a dlf- ONelll realftrmed the operators stand
ferent control o\*r the distribution that travel time already was recog-
of petroleum products." nlzed In the wag*- contract O'Neill
Issuance of ration coupons by the he had confidently expee’ed to
office of price administration, he said., drt»y<t ail agreement until this linal
was not held within the limit of avail- (Conference with Lewis yesterday.
able supplies—although the petroleum. _ _
administration provided accurate fore-
casts—and too many coupons were Is- 9fD AD DRIVE TO
sued to certain classes of consumers V C. IU
Reduction of the numbers of cou-
pons Issued to these consumers would
help to curb black market operations
because the black market In gasoline
comes about through those who have
more coupons than they need, giving
them or selling them to others." he
said.
Davies proposed a rationing system
which would place a gallonage limit rial attraction committee
on the number of coupons local boards yesterday,
could Issue and which would require Strain explain* that his commit-
an accounting by local boards for the tec haL been making plans for this
coupons they Issued surprise celebration for the past wreck
Bruce K Brown, assistant deputy but have not computed them vet
petroleum administrator for refining strain said the ‘‘tails will be an-
told the subcommittee that thus far pounced later this week
no practical substitute for gasoline - -
ha* been developed “CAUSE FOR DIVORCE"
Davies said the fuel oil supply next j --
winter probably will be at least 25 per g^N JOSF. Cal (UP)—Californians
and had them wrapped up before they
ever asked the price Money wasn't
the Item -using the shoe stamp wheth-
er they needed the shoes or not—did
serin to be the point.
Who I* more exicteii over the com-
ing war plant commuter picnic than
little Pop Rabktn?
Ripley, «re you listening? Do vou
know about the Chamber of Com-
merce, both senior and Junior presi-
dent^ of Sapulpa and their new sons?
Mqybe Mrs. Carrie Jones does live
In Tulsa these days but she's still mak-
ing Pa pulps headquarters more or less
and that's nice
most She said that her husband had
always worked hard and was a good
provider for his family She went
on to sav that too many marriages
these days are brok-n up because of
foolish quarrels
Weather
Oklahoma—8howers and thunder
storms today and In east and south
central tonight: precipitation locally
heavy northeast quarter today, some-
what cooler north and west today
and entire state, except panhandle,
tonight.
ORDER CHICKEN P1.EBI8TITE
BE WOUND UP IN
SURPRISE EVENT
Bapulpans are ir for a big surprise
for the ending of the local ferap
drive the fourth or (fifth of Julv.
Mirvtn Strain, cb.ilrman of the spe-
anncunced
of the king standing on the veranda
of a small villa reserved for officers
and Instantly eame racing along the
beach from all direction* like semi-
nude natives on the warpath.
The word reached even those in the
water and undoubtedly every swim-
ming record from 100 yard* up to a '
half mile was broken
In a matter o' s’conds. the beach
beneath the veranda was a solid mass
oi tanned, dripping m*n
| Suddenly, the excited hum of con-
versation wa> hushed rhe men began
singing "God Save the King"
The moment the anthem ended, the
king turned and went down the ucps
onto the teach itself That wasn't oti
the schedule and it caught his aides
•-> by surprise that he almost got
away from them
The king walked into the center of
thr crowd and stood there talking
with those nearest linn The crowd
sang another song then burst into
"For He's a Jolly Good Fellow."
There was no immediate announce-
ment of whether the king llew or
traveled ab-ard a warship to North
Africa If he flew it probably was
the first time since the start of the
war that he has traveled by air
by strict dollars and rents ceilings uland following the collapse of Italian
pn'ected by subsidies. resistance In the Sicilian narrows.
President Philip Murray of the Big fleets of flying fortresses es-
Coneress of Industrial Organizations corted by lightnings smashed at Sicl-
testifled that subsidies are necessary lian air bases in daylight yesterday
to protect American workers from They concentrated on the Bocca Do
being "caught in a vise between con- Falco and Casteivetrano bases in south-
western Sicily The airmen saw their
bombs bursting In areas crowded with
Axis planes, where many fires sprung
up
Mitchell and Marauder medium
bombers joined the offensive with
powerful attacks on the Sclaca and
Bortzzo air fields In southwestern Sic-
ily. while lightnings attacked Marsala
in western Sicily On the previous
night British Wellington bombers
I hammered at unidentified "Important
: airdromes" in Sicily.
Sixteen Axis planes were shot down
: yesterday and then the night before,
and seven Allied craft were lost
Meanwhile Axis propagandists said
.Allied preparations for an Invasion
of Sicily appeared to be nearing com-
! pletion Premier Benito Mussolini's
newspaper spoke of the arrival of
Italy's "fateful hour" In which the
only choice was "victory or death." A
(Continued on Page Two)
of October 2. 1942 without subsidies
to roll back prices.
SERIOUS FLOOD
CONDITIONS ARE
THREATENING KC
KANSAS CITY' Mo., June 16 (IPV-
Warning of the most serious Hood
conditions at Kansas City in many
years the weather bureau today pre-
dicted a tentative crest between 285
and 29 feet in the choked Missouri
and Kaw valleys Flood stage is 22
feet.
Members of the 3rd Ml."-ouri infan-
try. slogging through deepening mud
todav gave up the fight to save truck
gardens and one grain elevator in the
northeast part oi the city and moved
to the municipal airport, located In
a levee-protcctcd bend of thg Mis-
souri The 125 guardsmen from the
northeast industrial district joined 59
others already pairollntg airport
levees
C. C. LUNCHEON
FRIDAY IS LAST
TILL NEXT FALL
The board of directors of the
Chi.mber of Commerce will put on a
program for members at their lunch-
eon Fridav at the YWCA. Mickey
Katz said today.
Katz said that the directors will
have a round-table discussion on the
Radio London said Grlgg and Sin-
wimrr piuunuii ^ — *—• ban juor. vai *u .n—v ami" man* . , v »»Hrnn alr-
cent teas than normal peacetime con- invariably *tand up for California and rlalr arrived at a North African
sumption He added that, on a na- especially Its climate So when AH" ''~"1 1
tionwlde basis, there is a very defl- Harper told Sut» rtor Judge M G
ntte and very serious shortage of fuel Hutolo that hi* wife had refused to
oil." follow him here from Denver the
Davies said
port lust Saturday
The air route to North Atrica from
Britain lic> over the Bay of Biscay
*i>uuw ...... ..w... .a,..,...... where a Britbli passenger plane car-
Pnce Administrator j\|dgp said that was cause for divorce rylng Lo he Howard, movie actor, and
Downstream despondent farmers subject of community actlvltes
began to movp then household po*- certain talks will be made by th*
sessions and livestock out of the rich directors on the thinga they have ac-
Courtnev-Atherton bottoms. where complished this past year
?"00 acres of a bumper potato crop This will be the last luncheon un-
apparently was doomed. 1 til next fall
(Continued on Page 8U)
i and granted It
(Continued on Page Two)
Pencillin Is New Wonder Healing Drag Extracted From
Green Mold; Has Magical Effect On Wounded Soldiers
Who ha* more charm than Mra.
Ootteriewr Moedy at th. city hospital. \ 1NUI.KWOOD. Calf. <U.P>- A plfbU-
who looks more Immaculate these hot cite has been ordered on behalf of rab-
dav* than City Manager Fred Boone, bits and chicken* It will decide
who seems better humored at ah whether they are to be allowed within
time* than City Clerk A H Chap- the city limit* To make sure that
man. who still likes to rove about the everyone would vote, thr plebiscite
old home town more than Mrs Sam votes were sent out with each water
Moyeu. who purrs louder when you bill to the citizenry
meution his efforts than John Collins.
engineer at the city pump station, who
speak* a better brand of Old Vlrgii$la
thap Mra J. E Thrift.
M.4RKIAG! LK'KNME
rr*d Parsons, 32. Columbus tyin
and Dorthey LuciUe Adcock, 21. TulM.
By Joseph L. Ranft
United Perss Staff Correspandent
WASHINGTON June 16 (UP Pen-
ctllln— the new "wonder drug” which
Is estracted from a green mold has
already effected almost magical heal-
ing of wounded American soldiers
Dr A N Richards of the office of
scientific research and development
told a house appropriation* subcom-
mittee In testimony published today
that the office recently Investigated
the effect of pencllltn at the Bush-
nell Veterans' hospital In Utah on
several wounded soldiers back from
the Pacific
The men were weak and delirious;
and their wounds compound fractures
led with sulfa drugs
1 method* to no avail
and by
TWO SMALL KANSAS CYCLONES
COUNCIL OIV' VF Kan, June 16
dpi—Two small cyclones struck near
here last night injuring one peyxt
and demolishing farmhouses, bains,
and a recreation hall.
One storm, striking at 3 p m hit
the W’llliam Stivet, Jr . home one mile
east cf town and wrecked the six
room bungalow and also a dance hall,
owned by the Stivers. Mrs Stiver was
Injured slightly
Three hours earlier another storm
Mrs. McIntyre Is
Claimed By Death)
other i rhea. Dr Richards testified He said , demolished the silo. bam. and all out-
I pencillin clears up the Infection in two (buildings of a farm six miles north-
When pencillin was Injected, the days without danger ol complications west, of here belongin'* to Walter Oil-
wound* began to improve almost tm- Richard, said the army was so much |„*,piP only the houre, which was
mediately. Richards said Within a impressed by the preformance of pen- , hadlv damaged was left standing No
‘ ' “ *“"*■ 1 * “* “ one was Injured.
week most of the men had Improved ctUln at the Utah hospital that a
to such an extent that operations similar trial Is being made at Haloran
could be risked to remove such things hospital. Staten uland. New Y’ork
a* bone fragments, bits of uniform Medical officers will be trained to ad-
or. as in one Iwtanc* . galosh buckle minister pencillin at 10 hosp'tals
which had been driven Into the wound throughout the country he added
The most severe case which had Pencillin is "frightfully expensive
resisted treatment by ordinary means now but is hoped that some 18 com-
for four months, was completely heal-: panics Interested in the drug will soon
ed by the revolutionary drug In 27 be able to turn out large quantities at
days. Dr. Richards said moderate cost. Richards said.
Pencillin also has been remarkably* Re defined penclllu) a* a green mold.
The high winds In Council Grove
uprooted trees broke windows and
caused utility services to fall
MAID VOTES (KitF FRANCHISE
Plans f*>r funeral services for Mrs
Matilda Ann McIntyre. 83 years old,
who died at her home Monday were
Incomplete early today
She Is survived by her husband.
Guv McIntyre; four sons William, of
Mannford: Gilbert, stationed In Ari-
zona: C V, In Camp Wolters, Tex.,
and Abraham, Ip a Mississippi camp.
Two daughters survive They are Nel-
lie May, of Fapu'pa. and Mrs Edith
Wilson of BrUtow
A sister and foaf Brother* also sur-
vive
A . - ”
WAR CASUALTY LIST REVEALED
WASHINGTON. June 16. (U.6)—The
names of 229 United 8tales soldiers
killed in action ip th8 Nbrfh African
area were annutinced by the ww de-
aiid shattered bones had been treat-successful tn the treatment of gonor-growtng in an artificial liquid medium
Another Oklahoma community has
v ted to renew Its franchise to the
Oklahoma Gas and Electric comnanv partment today
to serve Its consumers The ctey of The list Includes-
Maud has voted th* franchise The1 Page 8gt Jerrell H -$#ri
ballot was 309 $0 2- Page, mother, ArdmBT#, Qkla.
Allot
* %
• •
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Young, John W. Sapulpa Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 28, No. 243, Ed. 1 Wednesday, June 16, 1943, newspaper, June 16, 1943; Sapulpa, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1527619/m1/1/: accessed July 12, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.