Sapulpa Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 29, No. 67, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 18, 1943 Page: 1 of 6
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VOL. XXIX. NO. 67.
SPOTLIGHT
HEWS TODAY
IN SAPULPA
C. C. EVENING MEETING
TOMORROW NIGHT AT 6:30
Tomorrow evening at 6:30 o’clock
the Sapulpa Chamber of Commerce
will have an evening dinner meeting
at which time an agricultural pro-
gram will be presented.
This dinner is open to the public
and 125 tickets will be sold.
Dr. C. L Angerer, head of the teach-
er training vocational training agri-
culture department of the A and M
college will be the special speaker
Several other agriculture experts are
due to accompany him here.
He will present agriculture charts—
particularly stressing records of Creek
county.
Aubrey Castles, agriculture teacher
at the Sapulpa high school, will be
program chairman.
Motion To Quash Bennett
Perjury Indictment Under
Way; Denies Jury Charges
SFORZA CHEERED IN NAPLES
BOOKER T. PLAYS
1. Ill I hit HIRE TONIGHT
The Booker T Washington Bulldogs
were set for their clash with the in-
vading Luther Red Devils here tonight
at Holmes park, at 8 o'clock.
It will be their last game of the
season.
Last year the Luther eleven took the
locals to a cleaning by a score of 14
to 7
The Booker T. aggregation predicted
one of the best games of the season
for tonight
STILLWATER, Nov. 18 (U.R)—A mo-
tion to quash a Tulsa grand Jury in- |
dictment of perjury against Dr Henry
O. Bennett, presld- nt of Oklahoma A
and M college, was reported under
preparation today by his attorneys.
The accused educator declined com-
ment on a possible motion to quash,
saying only:
"I have issued a statement about it.
Let my statement go for the present.
That's all I want to say." _
However, it was believed the reason! _. , . r- .1
A R Swank, one of his lawyers, had Saturday TlXed A* final
COLLECTION OF
SCRAP METAL IS
STRESSED HERE
SEAY NAMED NEW
JAYCEE PRESIDENT
At a called meeting of the directors
of the Junior Chamber of Commerce
last night Howard Seay was eheted
president of this organization to fill
out the term of Warren Shull, presi-
dent, who will report to military ser-
vice in the near future.
Seay will serve as Jaycee president
until May at which time new officers
to be elected.
Vacancies on the board will be fill-
ed at the next regular board meeting.
GOP CONTROL OF
OKLAHOMA LAW
requested a delay until 9 a. m Mon-
day to enter a formal plea to the in-
dictment was to obtain time to pre-
pare a motion to quash.
If District Judge S. J Clendlnmng
holds the college chief to district court
trial on the charges of giving "false
and corrupt” testimony to the grand
Jury. Bennett will post $5,000 bond
Monday Clendinnlng yesterday set the
bond at arraignment.
Bennett, in his public statement, pre-
dicted "subs quent events will prove
my innocence." He said that in his
"number'' of appearances .before he
grand Jury lie had given "full, true
and complete answers" to all ques-
tions ask'd him and had "supplied
every form of documentary evidence
which they requested which was in
my possession or which I could se-
cure."
The grand Jury at TuLsa has been
investigating textbook adoptions and
pricing m thods for six weeks, under
the direction of the county attorney,
Dixie Gilmer
Gilmer had accused Bennett oi
"stalling" and “pettyfogglng" after the
college president failed to produce a
copy of the contract he entered into
with the American Book Co., Chicago,
for publication af an arithmetic text-
book of which he was co-author. The
book was adopted by the state text'
book commission. .....
Bennett was arraigned in district
court at Tulsa yesterday, but won a
M A YCDC 1C CmV delay unt11 M :lday f°r entering ™
MAKERS IS SEiLIN f3rma] plea ol -»ot guilty. District
_ (Judge 8 J Clen-tnning said bond for
OKI AHOMA CITY Nov. 18 <U.R)— Bennett would be set at $5,000.
T,°K to. l5. Shv. CushlnR a Al»o
Drosoecuv Republican candidate for counts, was Willis Smith, president oi
U SP senator next year, predicted here the Jasper Sipes textbook depository
today that the OOP will "capture con- in Oklahoma C»ty.
trol" of the Oklahoma legislature in Perjury counts against Smith were
the 1944 elections i results of statements the grand Jury
The minister and Republican party charged he made Talsely in comwtton
leader said also that he expected only with testimony^ on tMbook j?'™*
"one or two faces" would remain among and price fixing Two of the coun
the present Oklahoma congressional against Bennett w"® in conn ctl£d
delegation after next year s vote with statements he made to the^ grand
President Roosevelt, he asserted.1 jury about his arithmetic text ana
probably will be the Issue in Oklahoma about the William H Murray founda-
in 1044 i tion. . .
The recent elections in Kentucky Another count
and other eastern and northern states president said he perjured himself when
Te?e imiled by the Cashing man as he testified he had never^^a^ve^.up-
sigas that the Republican party was ported any candidate for political oi
definitely on the upsurge throughout flee,
the country.
"It Is freely predicted." he said in
a written statement, “in every section
of the state by those who are high
In the counsels of the bureaucrats that
the Republicans will capture control
of the next legislature and elect a
majority of the state officers. | -
"It w also the concensus of many WASHINGTON Nov. 18. <LP>—Pros-
people that there will be a set of new settlement of the protracted
l„t„ In OUnhoma. ^ war*, to
be reviving today in renewed nego-
tiations between the bituminous oper-
ators and the Unted Mine Workers.
The first bargaining conference
since the mines were seized by the
Collection Date; 390
Ton* Set As Gc al For
This City.
Red Armies Trap Nazis
On Kiev-Gomel Frontier;
Enemy Thousands Doomed
STANDING In the midst of a group of Neapolitans, Count Carlo Sforza,
who recently returned to Italy from the U. S. after a long exile, drives
home a point in his plans for the future of his native land. It is reported
that he may replace Badoglio as premier. (International Radiophoto)
LABOR LEADER
IS SOUGHT IN
0. C. HEARING
Sapulpans were urged to get into
the swing of the local scrap metal
drive and help put the quota here
—390 tons—over the top. -
Wilbur Haynes. Jaycee member In
charge of the campaign, sought the
Hull Offers
Review of Late
Moscow Parley
British Press
Forward Today
In Italy Drive
By Henry Shapiro
| United Press Staff Correspondent
MOSCOW. Nov. 18 (LP>—Red arnt-
I ies on the Gomel and Kiev front*
have effected a Junction, establish-
; ing a 170-mile continuous line on the
I west bank of the Dnieper and doom-
I ing thousands of Oerman troops trap-
ped in a pocket to the east, field
i dispatches said today.
| The Junction, which pointed to an
__ early German withdrawal into the
Participant in Payoff heart of the Prlpet marshes, came M
. . f the Soviet command was rushing re*
For Dr. El»iminger S mforcements into the southwestern
r» II TL J tip ol the Russian bridgehead west
rarcle Is 1 nreaienea 0l Klev in w attempt to smash *
| German counter attack that forced
| the first red army retreat since the
1 start of the summer offensive in
With Arrest.
OKLAHOMA CITY. Nov 18 (UR)— July
A participant in the $8,000 payoff for The retreat was more than offset,
a parole for Dr J. W Eisiminger was however by joining of the two
STtSmSyimo^a.l^town “hltZS
«£- 525
The missing witness was Luther both Gomel ana Koro6ten.
- - By Harrison Salisbury
WASHINGTON Nov. 18 (IP)—Sec- United Press Staff Correspond* nt
assistance of Boy Scouts, the Boys1 f Sule Cordell Hull told con- ALLIED HEADQUARTERS Algiers. I The witness was Luther three eltlee
club and other organizations In mak- r * . nf fh. Nov. 18 (UP>—The BrttLsh eighth army. Langston, labor leader who. other wit- The early capture oi iditrirw ci ea
Inc the remaining days of this week BreSs that act UQn ot defying icy rains that swept the sod- nesses have testified, received $500 of —Rechitsa. Gomel and Korosten was
reniiv count four-power Moscow program of inter- den Italian battlefront, has punched the $8,000. „ predicted
Srout troop.* 22 24 and 25 have nat,0nal cooperation would obviate forward two miles in the Sangro river Langston was reported "sick at home The Gomel and Kiev amjes Joined
.L rftv into sections for the . . Vj nf -nfluence sector, smashing a German counter- and Miskovsky told District Judge A. hands acrcss the lower Prlpet river
divided the city into section, for tne lhe d ,or spheres .nfluence, ^ M£u b(,fore |t could get p VanMet*r that he would ask a along a stretch 12 to 20 miles north-
collection c g p “ *4 tor ta ance of P°air r 0 . underway. Allied headquarters report- bench warrant for the witness. The west f ft. confluence with the Dnle-
rom Ms , street west troop 2V Uar arrangemenis used in the past ed ^ prosecutor then sent an investigator trapplng a slzeable German force
from Maple street east, and troop i preserve peace j The advance—the only one recorded to the home with instructions to ob- lnslde the forg formed by the two
In a detailed review of the Anglo- Qn the enUre {ront tn Italy—occurrtd tain a doctor's affidavit of extent of nvers
American-8ovlet conference at Mos- about 12 mUes inland from the Adri- illness. The soviet force from the north
cow. Hull told a Joint meeting of the atlc and put the elghth army within C D McNally, a state investigator. . ^ bank —
house and senate that the basic pol- a few miles of the Sangro at that point, testified late yesterday that he gave p_ , ,h_ Ovruch-Chernl*
their scrap metal and place It on lcy of international cooperation for The Nazi counter-attack was observ- $500 cf the $1,250 he received from ... th them coi_
their front curbs This will be col- lhe maintenance of the peace and ed forming near the towns of Archi William-B. Strong, a former state leg!*- rhernobvl 57 mile,
lected on Saturday. 1 seCunty must be carried forward or and Perano. three miles northeast of lator. to Langston for obtaining a umns seized Chernobyl. 57 «*
Schools n-e also conducting a col- we aga,n ^ome "victims of de-(Atessa Aided by Royal air force Kitty- letter from Lewis R Morris former «>rthw«at of mev. and dwe on to
lection drive which will be taken to strucUve forces of international an- bombers, the eighth blasted the enemy county attorney who prosecuted Eisi- the west bank Ol the
the main scrap Iron depot here. |S whlH the absence of or- '— «»■ -old vet into action minaer for an abortion murder. The Oermans blunted the Soviet
from Main to Maple street.
A house to house canvass will be
made on Saturday.
Residents are urged to gather up
Ve Bovs club is denting all 1* .L .national relations will On the fifth army sector along the Strong was the principal state wit- bridgehead beyond Kiev with a mas-
™ a. th rereivinJ station ga. ^ lnteniational rela western end of the battle line, where ness today, explaining how he divided sive counter atuck between Zhlto-
scrap iron *' K rule the world- . „ troops were further hampered by the $8,000 paid by Mrs Eisiminger mlr 35 miles west of the Ukrainian
Explaining that the un‘te“ streams swollen to flood stag*- from Feb 7. 1942. for a parole for her hus- capiul, and Kcrostishev. 1# mile* to
Great Britain, Ruvia and cn a tbe ceaseless rains, the only action of band the east. Hie Rusaions yielded an-
the basic Moacow declaration ^ Pled8" importance was an attack on several
across from the fire station.
Boys and girls in the colored ad-
dition are also Joining in on this
collection of scrap iron. They are
ed themselves to carry forward to its
arked to have as much old iron as fuIlest development a broad and pro-
poertble collected by Saturday.
gressive program of international co-
Those with metal too heavy to operation." Hull told the congress
move are asked to call the Chamber
of Commerce and arrangements for
Us removal will be made.
small enemy boats caught sneaking up
the Gangliano river some miles from
the sea
A communique said that enemy ar-
the east. The Rusaions yielded **v-
He testified he divided the money erai towns under pressure of "num-
this wray: erlcally superior force*" and conaoU-
$1250 to McNally.
dated themselves In new portions.
*1.500 to Fred D Lowe, who M* ^ soviet midnight communique said,
turned state > evidence and previously ^
CHIEFS TO PLAY
IN BARTLESVILLE
A.C the provisions of the four-na- tillery was active at several points also testified that he gave *500 each to mfantrr forces again*t
ss S'“r»o“To»c^ a SSSS
« S'SS? “nU" "" roprnctor. V lSTZ?£S
balance of power or any other K,- Gen Sir Edward L *150 to Fred Davis. Oklahoma City ened to roll them all the way back to
soecial arrangement through which.' The gain by Gen Sir Edward L. $150 to Fred Davis. Ok
special arrangement uk Montgomery s troops was the longest lawyer, for attorney fees
in the unhappy past, the n l . . nint,„ .w* river-mountain On cross-examination Si
Poland. Soviet troops killed 1,509
. . in four davs along the rlver-mountaln On cross-examination Strong was ac- Germans and knocked out 50 of their
strove to safeguard thnr securi or ^ somp '8g mlles Rome where cused of "lying" by Chief Defense At- tanks before falling back
FRIDAY NIGHT,10 Promole thelr lnt*re*“? , a combination of mud. bad weather torney J B Dudley North of Zhitomir the Russian*
| Thuc. Hull continued, the results and stiffened German defenses had Asked if he had told Jean P Day, drove into the eastern suburbs of th*
the Moscow conference were of "su-' stalled Anied armies an Oklahoma City lawyer, that he had rauWay junction of Korosten on th*
SETTLEMENT OF
COAL MINE WAGE
DISPUTE LOOMING
The Sapulpa Chieftains go to Bart- preme importance.” At the meeting r ( CBg Correspondent Farnsworth taken an Imposter—not Lowe—to Mrs
lesvllle tomorrow night for the fifth of the Anglo-American-Soviet foreign ■ powie in a broadcast from Naples, Eisimingers home to complete the
Oklahoma Six conference game of the mlnislers -the whole spirit of inter- said the rain was ceasing and the parole deal. Strong replied:
‘ " — "That's right."
"Why did you lie?” Dudley asked.
Strong replied:
"I wanted to protect Fred Lowe.
faces in
with nueptlon of one or two
0 - - - 1 —
BULLETIN
season national cooperation, now and after sgies had cleared this morning The
Prrsh from a victory over Bristow war wa8 reVitallzed and given floods threatening temporary bridges
on Armistice Day the local eleven has „,acUca, €xpresglon.' over several streams had been success-
■ -The conference thus launched and fully combatted by engineers, he said.'
tory this week. tlr_,v convinced will steadily extend An Allied commentator emphasized
N«t game k the tut ol the ’ ' the aimculuee teeing Allied ttoops
Sapulpa s band queen will be crowned American political parties agree on ' a tremtndous problem for Al-
between halves on this occasion. She foreign policy, and thus remove them- enaineers
. ... selves from the field of competitive 8
politics. But he congratulated the
members of congress for their breadth
main Kiev-Warsaw and Leningrad*
Odessa lines with the capture ot
Khodaky. five miles to the east, and
Novaki. four miles to the southeast.
Thirty other town* and village*
also were seised on the Korosten
Day had been retained by Mrs Eisi- front, including Narodlchi. 25 mils*
minger to file a civil suit to recover to the northeast, where 600 German*
the *8.000 from Strong and Lowe after were killed and large booty taken.
is Miss Elizabeth Shirley.
T. B. EXAMS ORDERED
HUM
debate 1
. with supporters comenaing mai “-j — ' T„v„ _,ho ncBo-
op- JS an agreement with UMW pres-
"WASHINGTON. Nov 18 (U R)-Hoase ,------ -- bf)d yester.
debate on food subsidies opened today S0'11™1 Vcnuest of coll admlnls-
with supporters contending that ell- day at the request of com aam x
rcii 'r icni ivi' POSFSSION *nd height of vision and statesman- ngr ahoMA CITL Nov 18 (IP)—
ILLEGAL GASOLINE POSESSIO. , adopting by overwhelming Iod... ordcred identified the escrow agreement
san majorities resolutions The I which Mrs Eisiminger and Strong had
Alfred DeMangny. acquitted last week favoring U S wa^^r,irl^‘‘°a \a duty tubercular examinations covering J^ck*for*»000
of murder in connection with the death international s>stem for maintamance „ ----,u.n»i in«titnMnns
her husband had rejected the first of
two paroles issued by Phillips
Dudley asked Strong if Day had
ever requested return of the money.
“He never mentioned it to me," the
witness answered.
Roy Glass. Tom S Myers and E R.
Smith, employes of an Oklahoma City
Sentences were postponed until to- tory bp ]ost
morrow morning Bond for each was g6jd aas becoming increasing-
sel at, L}°° , h„ lv clear that the time was near when
mX‘ *»■ ■**.
ponents accusing the administration ident John L Lewis covering the per-
of failing to deal "courageously., hon- (jod of government operaton
c.stly and realistically" with price con- The conferees agreed to reconvene
trol. I todav but declined to discuss
Rep Charles Halleck. R . Ind. paced prospects of settlement,
the assault of anti-subsidy forces, who A), major coai fields except the
are expected to win the house battle., soutbern Appalachian area were rep-
by declaring that administration fail- | nttnied at the initial session. Re-
ures were to blamr for bringing the ^ circulated however. In union
Issue before congress. , quartet* that a new alignment of op-
TtZjFz: -'7 ^ jrzzss.,h,t
sr “tra taufS'sl'tyss*' sjj.
Inflation the responsibility for which ] Appalachain group scheduled a m
"will rest with congress." I ing today to decide whether to join.
The basic issue," he continued, "Is These three obstacles were believed
price control versus inflation. I have to be standing In the way of a set-
no doubt of the final outcome of the tlement:
present global war. but I am sure that 1 j The operators' concern over
inflation will prolong it." whether they will receive a satlsfac-
The congress of industrial organlza-1 tory prtCP adjustment to cover in-
tions. meanwhile, came to the admin- j crraM>d costs.
lstratlon's support. CIO President, 2 fin<nng« 0f an Investigating
Philip Murray In a letter ^ fI!2URe 1 committee assigned by President ------------------- --------
I.' ader Joseph W Martin Jt' . of Mas- Rooseve,t to determine average travel 1 d Llberator tx,mbers of the United
“ldorl 'TeadershlpTn^.time In vartoas districts aUte. eighth air force carried out the
^r^n lnCl ltse f at ttiLs crltical point 3 The UMW demand for a ^ second American attack on Norway in
in^iiur* war effort *he 'party of India- payment to cover alleged retroacUv. d>yg loday B few hours af,„ a
liability of the o|ierators resulting Brttigh raiding fleet st.uck in force
from the requirements of the wage-
hour law and non-payment of travel
time under the old contract.
___________ all inmate* of state penal Institutions _
of his father-in-law, Sir Harry Oakes, of peace . ^ m a new phase of a sweeping pro- ______ __
today was convicted of Illegal possession Hull said that although the enemy m {or improvement. MRS. C. F. FOWLER
of 180 gallons of gasoline, allegedly has suffered defeat after defeat. ^ ^ rec0mmended recently by - . nx/ r\r A TU
stolen from RAF Installations here we still face enormous hardship* and ^ noted penologist, that 1 AlvLIN DI LltA I M
Also convicted on the gasoline charge vast sacrifices' He emphasized again strict segregation be effected to pre-
was DeMarlgny's friend and house- and again the importance of inter- spread of tuberculosis inside the
llAVA.iin fTn/VCflOC tcHplOll ■ _______. . . J , ■ nr) art A tv/I . * ... ___
Small European
State Federation
Opposed by Russia
By M. 8. Handler
United Press Staff Correspondent
___ . . _______ . _________________ „rs norniLr ru.m .u MOSCOW. NOV. 18. (UP'—Russia took
mate Marquis Georges DeVisdelou nnUonai cooperaUon and undertand- s0n wa„s At ,ast counl there were , the home of her daughter.' Mrs a s“nd today against any po«t-
Oulmbeau. .. . ing lest the full fruits of final vlc* more than 200 tubecular Inmates at c ~ *-J—'“• -“"M
the McAlester penitentiary.
MARRIAGE LICENSES
Mrs Florence Fowler, age 70. died
ughl
w V rxsner u. Worth «•»»... m piain that the Soviet*
street, early yesterday after a long QppoM anything re8emblmg a cordon
tne nome oi nrr uau^mer. ------ - - • - „
D Fisher of 1103 North Eighth federation of European
She is survived by her husband. A^i^tatellUta^to take thJir'Scto*.
waia Mos ley, a wivnas in xus , . enemv erasD Garden H Larson. 21, Woodruff. C F Fowler, one daughter. Mrs Through the official government or-
durlng the murder trial. Bruce Thomp- *ou‘d [ remaining Am and Edith Fern Hagen. 19. Sa- Fisher; two sons^ Newell of Indo gan Izvestla the soviet. set forth their
“e?ou^nd. QUOr ^ 1 -cSnZed on W....... *" ---------------------------------
pulpa.
By William B. Dickinson
United Press Staff Correspondent
LONDON. Nov 18. (U.W—Four-motor-
In our war effort the party
tldn."
BAPTIST CONVENTION CLIPING
OKLAHOMA CITY. Nov. 18 (U.R)—
Th** Oklahoma Baptist general con-
vention closes here tonight with n
ceremony at which a plaqup honoring
FIRE AT STORAGE ROOMS
The Wilson storage rooms, at Cleve-
at the Rhineland chemical center of
Ludwlgshafen.
American and British heavy bom-
bers teamed in day and night bom-
bardments of German proper and out-
posts of Nazi Europe in occupied Nor-
way to put the western offensive back
Calif , and Jack Fowler in th. navy, opposition to any artificial union of
■ A sister, Mrs. Roy Birchett of Hoi- small nations and revealed that it had
denville, and a brother, Tom Self of been made known to Britain and the
this city, also survive. United States at the recent three-
Funeral rite, will be held tomor- power ocnference here, prompting no
row afternoon at 2:30 o’clock at the objection from either nation.
Church of Christ with Rev Bristow “This must be especially emphasis*
in charge. Burial will be mad* In ed—the Soviet Union firmly rejects any
South Heights. A Tulsa funeral home attempts to laimch a policy of the
1. „ cordon sanitartre, regardless of the
has charge of arrangements form und*r which is may be masked,M
the first time the Liberator bombers | tark on Kalamakl^lrfWA ;ne jtner FEAR BOAT CRASH It mU5t t* recognized that sever*!
U. S. Bombers Carry Oat Second American Attack
On Norway; Mediterranean Bases Are Also Pounded
It was I bombers followed through with an at-1
without specifying the targets
------ ,7 . — ,mv»ii*<i innd and Water street, were slightly on a running basis
state chaplains will be . . .^ (iamftged bv fire this afternoon short- Mediterranean-based bombers Joined
, (^lv °^r' fdr,KJrart X ceremony Tv Tfore 2 o'clock Burning gras, in the campaign agains, Europe with
tojifliver an wAint* at_the cmnoiqr. (hp flrp .attacks on German air bases In the
w -1 ^r“":
“-Lsra.3
ppment of a peaceful world.
pr*ved loday
reappearance in the Europen theater
after a protracted absence.
Fortresses and Liberators struck the
heaviest blow of the war at Nazi tar-
gets In Norway Tuesday when they
destroyed the Knaben Molybdenum
mines and the Rjukan power station
and Electrolysis plant.
Today's raid was the third by Amer-
ican bombers on Norway. In the sec-
ond Tuesday only two bombers were
lost and six German fighters were
distroyed
American Flying Fortresses again
spearheaded yesterday's offensive from
Mediterranean bases Blasting the El-
sulls airfield 12 mlles northwest of
Athens, the Fortresses scored hits on
five out of nine hangers at the big
►German base
Fighter-escorted Mitchell medium
IN Gl'LF 18 FATAL TO 8 projects of federation recently ema-
enemy “«!{***.'"“ ddgbt CORPUS CHR1STI. Tex. Nov 18. of^the^on gth bi^upt^^U-BodSS
w °Ur nLthwest Afrlcan°air 0P»-Eight men were believed to have policy ”
bers fro” industrial targets at dled when na navV P®Y flying boat Arguing the prematurity of any dls-
Pinmbin^Zdthe Italian wes* coast crashed into the Gulf of Mexico yes- cusslon of the artificial encouragement
Elba I terday 100 miles southeast of Gal- of federation in any form. Izvestla said
01 Fmhter-bombers and fighters round- veston. Lt. Hugh FVlming, Jr., public Russia considers It th*1 0*r”
. out tb{, offensive with attacks on relations officer at the Corpus Chris- many's satellite should enjoy a statu*
——.......... ** ~un“d '««'• i«
Instance, cannot and must not escape
the consequences of being Hitler's and
Mussolini's accomplice*, even though
they are small nations,” the editorial
said
Informed of Russia’s attitude on th*
matter when they were here. Secretary
and communications behind the battle
area
"During these and other operations,
five enemy aircraft were destryed in
the air." a communique from Algiers
said "Two of ours are missing.”
Taking off from middle-eastern
ba.ses. Allied planes set fire to a small
Weather
Oklahoma—Fair and continued
supply ship east of Crete and strafed mild today and tonight, except warm-
thP island itself without loss, a Gano
communique said. I ing cooler north half.
supply snip easx u. rrfVr mi* ai- oi stat* Cordell Hull and Foreign Sec-
motor transport Rnd other target/* on pr along tnp pa^tarn bordpr inis ax ♦ ,, pj-,.
She Island itself without loss, a Carlo Wl-noon: Friday partly cloudy, turn- 7 ^^ued on ^age Two?^
, «
♦ •
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Young, John W. Sapulpa Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 29, No. 67, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 18, 1943, newspaper, November 18, 1943; Sapulpa, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1528094/m1/1/: accessed April 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.