Sapulpa Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 28, No. 243, Ed. 1 Wednesday, June 16, 1943 Page: 2 of 6
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VAGIItW
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Established In 1914
■nterad u second-class mall matter, September 8. 1914, at tbs
postoffice at Sapulpa, Oklahoma, under an act of March 8, 1897.
JOHN W. YOUNG .............................. Editor and Publisher
MRS. PAYE REECE DUNLAP______________ Cashier and Bookkeeper
DELIVERED BY CARRIER ANYWHERE IN SAPULPA,
MOUNDS. KIEFER, BOWDEN, AND KELLYV1LLE.
One Week_____________________________________________-_____ 16 Cents
One Calendar Month ________________________________________ 60 Cents
Three Months (must be paid In advance) _______________________ $1.25
Six Months (must be paid In advance) __________________________ $2.50
One Year (must be paid In advance) ____________________________ $5.00
ALL MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS PAYABLE IN ADVANCE
Three Months ________________________...________________________ $126
Six Months ..................................................... $250
One Year _______________________________________________________ $5 00
and transport The London daily mall enemy planes raided Dobrudura New f of last year's Michigan State football
WEDNESDAY, JUNE IS, IMS.
par - 1- - IT —r ----
tier said mass evacuations had begun Guinea, for the 19th time since it was
tier said mass evacatjons had begun captured by the Allies but causod only
from the Ruhr. Rhineland and Ham- slight damage
burg areas _,___i-
On the Russlon front. Moscow con- 1 lAO CALL FOR HOME TALENT
ceded that the Germans had smashed • _
back, into the outskirts of one of lour | The USO still needs local talent
nearly captured towns northeast of f0r t^e show thev have planned for
Orel hinge of the central and south- the Camp Gruber a. Idlers Saturday
ern front*. But they were reported njpnt, Mis Lester Childress, director
thrown back from the town with a lass of the y9ryw ^nlt.r saKl todHy.
lot •JUO men. Mrs. Child res* said that talented 8n-
tfam, has won the athletic council
medal awarded annually to the'Sen-
ior athlete who best combines' scholar-
ship with athletic ability. Mangrum
is from Durand, Mich.
DRIVES TWICE TO WORK
RAMONA. Calif (U.E—Monte F.
8te»eall, 21. riveter. Is doing more '
than his "bit” for the wur effort. He
?5m
.Y •
LONDON. June 16. CUP -British me- ^ T'coSJThS^ tl£ drlvcs 55 mUes tWlce day to the
dium and fighter bombers, taking over
the Ailed air offensive, bombed and
strafed railroad and water transport
through Fiance. Belgium and Holland
last night, the air ministry announc-
ed today
service center gh- also stated Hiat £°p“°j^at'witi/ him in ' hb^car^ur
Whirlwinds attacked an airdrome !?£?.
near Dunkirk, a tugboat and barages ?*ven in the service club No. 1.
In the Ghent and Lys canals, a tor- — ---
pedo boat off Ostend and various rail- ‘FISHES' 10 SUITS OF CLOTHES
road targets. — ■■ ■
| A mosquito fighter-bomber pilot. In LOS ANOELES. Cal. (LP)—Polico
a 1.000-mile round trip during the are looking for a burglar fisherman
night, shot down an enemy twln-en- who made a good haul without even
gined bomber near an airfield at Aal- getting the seat of his pants wet.
borg. Denmark The same pilot two with a rod. reel, line and hook he
months ago shot down two enemy fi-hed 10 suits of clothes out of a
planes over another Denmark airfield men's furnishing store and then de-
A Berlin broadcast reported that parted, leaving his tackle behind him
many cities in the German Ruhr and fp thiU the robben would not be a
| Rhineland stlH were smouldering from m,,st to the ^)llce.
the neavy aerial bombardment by 1 ____
British planes, which dropped nearly vn .. ....... .. vnu,
4.000 tons of bombs in two raid> alone SACRCtFNTO Cnl tiPv-Mnr-
, last Friday and Saturday night*. SACRAMENTO. QM. (lP)-Mfli-
I A Daily Mail dispatch from tne Oer- ™8e .Ucenfcs California for the
man frontier said mass evacuations *lme in veais are being on
had' begun from the Ruhr. Rhineland n ras*1 iuul carr> ba^us This has been
and Hamburg areas It reported a mat,e possible by the repeal of the
_ _ I general deterioration in enthusia.Mn 'marrugf law, which required
'tor the war and increased grumbling ■PpUCMlt* to give ’hree flats notice
YOU CAN FORGFT ABOUT THF. LAW IF YOU ARF and 111-temper among the bombed ol Intention to wee in order to make
FILL ED WITH FAITH AND 1 OVE IF YOU ARE P°Pulace certain they were not under the ln-
ra.LE.IJ WI1M tAim AVL 1-UVL. ir I Mr\c German plBn<,s bom^ xmo south- fluence of gin at :he time.
For Their Country!
Do we make void the law
SPIRITUALLY MINDF.D:
through faith?—Romans 3:31.
------ -
AND THE CRISIS WILL COME
Committing himself openly and unreservedly to the fourth term
movement Senator Thomas declares in Oklahoma Cfty: ' If the war
east coast towns early today, but no
1 casualties and only slight damage were
reported.
ALLIED HEADQUARTERS. Austra- , . . 4.
lia June 16 'UP A two-hour. 23-ton ^°810n; father 'wore
raid
I EGIONN AIRE SWEARS IN SON
EVERETT Mass < LP>—For the first
time in the history of the American
In hts son
Rebaul, ‘New Britain—the a<: a le«lon memb-r The father-son
it on, it could not be anyone except Roosevelt. And if the war fourth in six days—caused "extreme tram was Comdr^ Anthony Florentine
should prove to be another Thirty Y ears war, we suppose that it damage among Parked planes on Lu- " T'*’text Post 1 Cl!)drle.?,
...n „ 1 j . I ■ . o i. •• kunai airdrome, a spokesman reported ent*ne. veteran of World War II. who ;
•till could not be anyone except Roosevelt. ^ today. recently received a medical discharge
It ;s the war then that justifies the president’s bid for a fourth The latest raid, made by 19 Liber------
election. The war 'is rhe c -isi* that Americans were forewarned ators, was concentrated on Lukanai. | "'I NDAY DINNER STOLEN
would produce a leader who would be indifferent to a long °ne, °* the b‘« airdromes at Ra- HOI LYWOOD. Cal . <IP>-J P Bar-
I . , j. . baul. but nearby Rapopo also was hit. ry’s version of the "meanest thief
tevtamisiied tradition. , _ I Reconnaissance pictures made after theme was the man who stole his
In debating a resolution that sought to impose a constitutional the attack showed 250 planes on the family"? entire Sunuay dinner from
limitation of two terms John Sharp Williams once said in the senate- airdromes and a spokesman added the refrigerator consisting of two
“I said the only dangerouse men to free instAutions were popular and i"a\ Pounds of pork chons. one pound of
71 t• a iii i i i i , surviving Japanese planes indicated beef a tround of butter a can of
men. They must first be oold. then they must be popular and our bombers inflicted exterenie dam- pear?, two cans of tomato Juice and
then they must be ambitious—unscrupulously ambitious. If you age at Lakunal airdrome cne bottle ot beer Tin bottle o' beer
give them these three things and then give them a crisis they Flames sprang up in revetment areas was tbP only jien. [jlat wa?. not, la.
would prevail. Yj>u are going to have crises in your history and ^he uKmton*0™? ,i0ned'
you aTe going to have men of ’hat kind aircraft fire and attempted interccp-
Undoubtedly we now have the popular man of whom Williams tion but all returned
•poke—a remarkably popular man. And according to Senator J^Pan5se ^*ent _5i planes, ln-
Thomas we now have such a crisis as Senator Williams had
mind.
In substance if not in exact words Senator Thomas asserts that causing some damage Nine other ^
the war has rendere i the president indispensable, I»-. ». NEUTRALIZE QUICKLY
eluding 27 bombers, against native
,n , villages in the Benabena area pf New
Guinea 90 miles northwest of Lae,
T\< KLE WINS MEDAL
LAST LANSING Mich <LP»— Rich-
ard W. Mangrum regular tackle for
the past two season and co-captaln
But if Mr- Riosevelt himseltf is covinced of his own indispensa- ' p, y up
bility, he had become convinced since his first election in 19 32. “©IMP vaUITIS
Towards the close of that year's campaign he said to the American
people: A great man left a watchword we can well repeat,
'There is no indispensable man.' The genius of America is stronger
EXCESS STOMACH ACID
Acid stomach causes heartburn, gas
q ii Y | ■ n and indigestion. You c:in neutralize
Spoil IOUr I.OOKf. mis acid quicklv bv taking a sooon-
One look at some “GUMS' is enough (u! of Bisma-Rex In a glass of water
to upset anyone — Drugiist:. refund after every mea; It Is delicious fast-:
than any candidate or anv party. This campaign hard as it has money if firs bottle of "lETO s ing Buv a bottle of 50 doses for oOc
4—.n L., „r i m ___ r j faiL to satL-fy REEL DRLG STORE today at the Rexall Drug Store—O. i
-been ha, not shattered my sense of humor or mv sense o proper- _adv. L Hum.s Drug stores ^glv.
rm WOMEN WHO SUFFER FWM>
not nuns
If you suffer from hot fluhes. dizzi-
ness. distress of "Irregularities^, »re
weak, nervous—due to the functional
"middle-age" period In s woman’s
life—try Lydln E Plnkham's Vege-
table Compound Its helped thou-
sands upon thousands ot women to
relieve such annoying symptoms.
Follow label directions Plnkham's
Compound Is worth tryinf’
tion. I still know tht»t the fate of America cannot depend on any-
one man. I he greatness of America is grounded in principles and
not on any single personality."
But Senator Thomas is convinced that Mr. Roosevelt was
Wrong. The president himself admitted by his action in 1940 that
he was wrong in 1932. Probably he will admit it again in 1944.
But millions of joval Americans still believe that he was right I I
years ago ard thev would go right on believing it even if a
majority of the proplr should elect the president for life and set
up a heriditary government.—Oklahoman.
Allies
dent in war production board Nelson
Nelson in turn authorized the office
of price adminLtratlon to ration ga.so-
llne. coffee sugar and other products
But Nelson now has transferred ra-
tioning responsibilities to him. White-
side said, and "In the future we an-
ticipate being the initiator of ration-
ing, If there is to be any,'
The cotnmltte also learned that:
The nation, through aircraft pro-
duction. is forging almast incredible"
striking power.
Ingot steel capacity by the end of
1941! wdll have been increased about
10,000,000 tous since Pearl Harbor.
War expenditures for the three fis-
cal years ending June 30, will total
about $110 000.000 000
It »U1 not be necessary to slow down
the wht effort to a noticable degree
in order to produce sufficient goods
U> maintain a healthy civilian econo-
my.
Rubber Director William M Jeffer
told the committee that synthetic rub-
ber production will be adequate to meet
normal tire demands by early autumn
of 1944
Then, he added, "we can forget rub-
ber as a problem in this country."
factories since the start of the war.
His most noteworthy loreign trip
before the war wea a six-week Journey
v.nh Queen Elizabeth to the United
Stater and Canada In 1939 In 1938,
their majesties visited France
Be .ides the British first and eighth
artnie the king probably visited the
American fifth army, last reported tn
ncti-.i training in Morocco. A dispatch
from fifth army headquarters said
Elsenhower visaed there yesterdav
and it was possible that he was ac-
c'tnpntiled b\ King George Ongg and
Sinclair.
Important Dates
Coming Up
June 20- Father's day.
Talk Of
King
16 other persons *w shot down nearly
two weeks ago on a flight from Lisbon
to England.
Fleets of German plane', have been
reported active over the Bay of Bis-
cay In recent weeks and it was theor-
ised for a time that they may have
boon gunning for Churchill, who ar-
rived bark In Britain lrom North AI-
rlca and Washington JUme 5, or some
other promlneiff allied personage
Klntt Qeorge rer-ntly was described
at Britain s No 1 wartime traveler He
has traveled 36,000 milt*. In 252 Jour-
Beys by rail to war cam pa. ports and
radio commentator sounded the cry-!
"Stand by for invasion"
Spanish sources near Gibraltar said
r an Allied convoy of 25 merchantmen,
a battleship and an aircraft carrier
arrived at the British base from the
Mediterranean
The air offensive agatwst western
Europe dwindled farther British
medium bombers and fighter-l*>mber«
took It over by night, blasting and
t gunning Gentian railroad and water
transport in France, Belgium and Hol-
land *
1 Berlin reported that many cities In
1 the Rhineland and Ruhr still were
smouldering from the pounding they
took over the week end Some cities
were reported without gas. electricity
O. L. HUMES
DRUC ■ STORE
Serving Those Who Sene for \ ieton
THE CHEVROLET Ml ( II \\l<
now more than erer ennential to 4mem a ** mir >
CIVILIAN DEFENSE
COMMUNICATIONS
CONSTRUCTION
DOCTORS
ELECTRIC POWER
ENGINEERING
ESSENTIAL WORKERS
FARM SUPPLIES
FARM VETERINARIANS
HIGHWAY MAINTENANCE
INDUSTRIAL MANAGERS
INDUSTRIAL WORKERS
LUMBER CAMPS
MACHINERY
MEAT PACKERS
MEDICAL
. SUPPLIES
MINES
OIL WELLS
POLICE CARS
PUBLIC HEALTH
PUBLIC SAFETY
RED CROSS
ACTIVITIES
SCHOOLS
SHIPYARDS
SURGEONS
TECHNICIANS
VITAL SUPPLIES '
WAR PLANTS
.. . and many other trade*, bueineaaek and profes-
sion* whose product* and tarvice* are important to
the war effort
** /* buy ‘a \,
* • A
• U. S. WAR BONDS ft
w
* AND STAMPS • y'
*
IflS SKIM- help*- lo inuintttin the ears which carry mil*
licrtiH of war worker* lo and from I b< ir j«>lte, day after day*
HIS EXPERIENCE help* to preserve the truck* which
carry vital material* to und from war plant* huildiaR
arm* and equipment for our fight in? men.
IIISSERYICEhdpa lot-wen c tht-tur-and trucks of hard-
working farmer* who arc ferdint America and her allies,
•*t ,*>**. • >« \i,
f .MKV KOI I T III VI I K
t.M III')' > .MM > \\|
’ eJieet
kr+ut>
^ai
p«Puit
(STANDARD CHEVROLET CO.
321 E. bewey SAPULPA, ORLA. Phone 4M
NO SACRIFICE is too great for the
200 members of the Kenilworth
Girls Service organization In Chi-
cago where the boys of the armed
forces are concerned—even the
sacrifice of rationed shoes! The
girls estimate that they have
danced 2,000 miles toward vic-
tory in entertaining aervleemun
and Verna Parkhurst Is showing
the sad result, (l u(ei idCional)
i .1
A Gift from MORTON’S
FOR AM
m)
Father’s Day
Is Next Sunday
Beautiful White Shirts
by
SHIRTS
White 'Shuts are the
perfect Dads Day gift
—and Knro Is the p"r-
fect quality ?hlrt!
$0.25
1.50
Your Dari will appreciate an Enrol it's the perfect fitting,
better quality shirt. Choose from icy white broadcloths,
smooth and lustrous, from Whiptwill white pique and
Twill-breeze sheers. All sizes and sleeve lengths.
Dandy White Shirts
We have a good stock of these lower
priced white shirts, too. Y ou II agree they
are certainly dandies at $1.65. Smooth,
fine white broadcloths, expertly tailored.
QI&W that a Jis
"I4CI ON HIS FttT"
»$»5 to *|H
Wc don't know of anything Dad would appreciate more
IMr a pair of smart, friendly-fitting Jarman* to pamper
hl« over-walked Art. Their distinctive friendliness
, e
of fit will give him real wafking comfort.
The pattern 'rhoHvn and many
more—exclusively at Morton’s
* in Sapulpa.
• • • . • • • _•
. m * > .WMr-.
Fastest Drswinr Department More In Oklahoma"
132-124 EAST DEWET
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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/m1/2/: accessed June 29, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.