Sapulpa Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 30, No. 129, Ed. 1 Friday, February 2, 1945 Page: 1 of 6
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THE SUN
•
never sets on products
made in Sapulpa by
Sapulpans. Be proud of
your city.
SAPULPA HBffiATUP
Greek. Gounic/s Only Daily Newspaper*
Average Daily
Circulation for
January, 1945
4096
VOL. XXX. NO. 129.
SAPULPA, OKLAHOMA FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1945.
FIVE DOLLARS PER YEAR
MANILA UNDER
ASSAULT FROM
TWO DIRECTIONS
EDITORIAL
What Is Our Tomorrow?
What are t5>e things of which a city is built?
Is it bricks laid on end . . . streets paved with concrete
. cars flowing in traffic lanes?
Is it gas mains, electric lights, water faucets?
Do these inanimate articles comprise the sum total of a
,city’s HOPE FOR TOMORROW?
__ The Sphinx probably contains more mortared stone than
Tanks and Infantrymen Today all of Sapulpa combined ... yet around its base is a swirling
£“R“™nsMassini£n °def Rivet
armored nREpor Final Stab- As Nazi
">MA
ms-roMcM
!SS
Converge on City After
New Larding Made
BACK DOOR OPEN
New Thrust Puts Japanese in
Tight Vise; No Deter-
mined Stand Likely
Bv WILLIAM B. DICKINSON
United Press War Correspond! nt
LUZON. Feb. 2. (UP) —
I American tanks and infantry-
vmen converged on Manila
I from two sides today.
The capital and the entire
Japanese defense system In south-
‘ ern Luzon were outflanked with a
l surprise landing 13 miles below the
| mouth of Manila bay.
Amphibious fore's of the U. S.
eighth army, knifing into the ene-
my's thinly-Md west coast de-
wilderness of sand and empty desolation.
The location of a city is in many respects important . . .
yet cities are built BY MEN. Men of good purpose and
resolute hearts. Men who dare to accomplish. Men with
vision.
What is Sapulpa s TOMORROW?
Are we the victims of an unknown fate? Shall we accept
such a premise and drift along hoping that through the
uncertain maze we shall find the lightning striking bye and
bye?
Every business man . . . every property holder in this
city should sit down quietly in the comfort of their office or
home and seriously ask, ‘‘What is my tomorrow? What is the
tomorrow of my business?
The answer to all these questions is OUR TOMORROW
Entire Sections of First Lir.w
Siegfried Defenses Are
Being Evacuated
SPORADIC FIRE
Mobile Field Guns Harass U.
S Troops; French Still Are
Advancing in South
By BOYI) D. LEWIS
United Press War Correspondent
Barricades Go Up in- The City
Berlin Savs That Initial Tank
Assault? Have Been
Repulsed by Nazis
FRONT LINE CITY
NAZIS REPORTED SETTING UP HEADQUARTERS HERE
Civilians Reported Converting
Berlin Into Great Fort;
Buildings Demolished
PARIS, Feb. 2—Lt. Gen.
George S. Patton's Third army
spearheads drove two miles
deeper into German soil today.
The forward thrust was at the
center of a 40-mile American of- " 1 *" 'w* '
tinge with tensive front grinding through the I he Liermans reported today
! outer works of the Nazi Siegfried that powerful Russian forces
future is the
either
we have
IS A THING WE CAN FASHION WITH OUR OWN
HANDS TODAY."
Let not the scoffings of timid ones among
doubt the elemental Bruth of that statement.
The only condition that can qualify our
tenses for the third time in 48 lethargy or lack of vision on our part,
heurs, swarmed ashore early Wed- Sapulpa's ceiling as a city has not been reached
nesday at Nasugbu bay, 41 miles from a business standpoint or one of population. If
S°XWland°inK was dcompleied with- ‘‘leveled off" itf’s solely because our indifference was pulling
out ldss and at last reports the the throttle and not our ambition.
Americans were advancing inland "fbe next five years is going to witness miracles in this
through weak op^sUbn at a pace ,ion f fhc nati Cities tha, are now but y hamlets meet the Red army push in the
that may already have carried them . • • i j tl _ •___i , cast, was reported most pronounc
to the shores of Manila bay, with- are 8oin8 ‘° rise m splendor. 1 hose same ^miracles, how- le(j northeast of Monschau, where
ever, will be miracles only to those who didn t «inow of the
work and sweat that took place behind the scenes by the
towns involved.
Are we going to repeat the same mistake Sapulpa did
a few tens of years ago when it had the chance to be the
TULSA of this seejion?
The answer is up to us. ... ,. # chine guns and rifle fire. German
I he torces of opportunity may be in the making at 1 M1J mobile field guns behind the west
MOMENT.
By ROBERT Ml'SEL
X United Press War Correspondent
LONDON. Feb. 2. (UP) —
in artillery range of Corregldor
The new thrust broke open the
back door to Manila, already me-
naced by U. 8 sixth army veterans
moving down from the north. The
sixth army’s 37th < Buckeye) di-
vision was reported 23 milts or
less north of the capital, on and
probably beyond the Angat river
line below Calumpt.
Gen. Douglas MacArthur’s com-
munique said the 37th's patrols I
were operating freely throughout
the area, indicating that the Japa-
nese were making no ai tempt at
a determined stand above the capi-
tal.
Caught between the two Ameri- 1
can columns, the Japanese in Ma-
nila faced the prospect of retreat-
ing southeastward around the 1
shores of Laguna de bay within
the next few days or being trap-
ped and annihilated insld.1 ihe city.
Their only other altcrnauve was a ,
flight to Corregldor foi a death
stand on "the rock."
(A broadcast rrtJfln tflO oSpanese-
controlled Singapore radio said
enemy units entrfnched along the
Manila highway were strongly sup-
ported by tanks and artillery units
American spearheads, the broadcast I
claimed, were "completely cut off
from communication and are re-
ceiving insufficient supplies by
air.")
line.
Field dispatches said the Ger-
mans were abandoning entire sec-
tions of their first-line Siegfried
defenses and pulling back into the
main fortifications three to four
miles fan her east without a strug-
gle. The withdrawal, apparently
dictated by the need of reserves to
the Germans were known to have
built a double wall of defensis cov-
ering the Cologne plain.
Small Arms Fire
At other points, however, the
massing along ibp Oder east
of Berlin were trying to smash
across that last big barrier before
the capital, in the streets of which
the terrified civilians were throw-
ing up barricades.
The German high command said
strong Red army units had reach-
ed the Od' r cn either side of
Frankfurt. 38 miles due last of
Berlin, and northwest of Kustrin,
where the Oder elbow points down
within 39 miles of the city.
A Nazi military commentator re-
ported that the first effort by Mar-
shal Gregory K. Zhukov's first White
r*-.
jl
_____ Russian army to force the Oder
bornly along Ore outef fr^gi s of made at Ku*lrin' 42 mlles e“‘-
the Slegried line with mortars, ma-
m
>;,« -
jr "T.a
•*M*V*£P
northeast of Berlin
German Pep Talks
“The courageous citizens of Kus-
wall were maintaining a sporadic ‘r‘n hchased ba<* a 8°Vet, taI)k
fire all along the front, while giant dptftrhm!"* wh,rh *“ 'rvln“ *"
Leave Sapulpa
Soon To Join
Armed Forces
KELLYVILLE BOY
A FLIGHT CADET
WAR IN
BRIEF
By United Press •
EASTERN FRONT — Russians
drive toward Oder river defense
barrier 30 to 39 miles from Berlin.
WESTERN FRONT—First and
third armies advance on 40-mile
front against light opposition;
G e rm a n s reported abandoning
Siegfried line fortress** one to
five mile* inside reich.
PACIFIC—A m e r I c a n forces
converge on Manila from two
sides after new landing southweat
of city.
ITALY—Activity Umlted to pa-
trolling.
"Well be seeing you on our first
leave home,” Is the theme song
these days of a group of 20 Sapulpa
young men who will leave soon for
induction Into the armed forces.
These men, who have passed all
pre-induction examinations and
comprise the called group are:
Roy J. Brawn, Wilbert H. Cop-
len, John Ray Wallace, Ben F.
Person, James K. French. Sam Jack.
Wayne I. Jones, Troy Whltehouse,
Alva B Rlchburg, Henry D Moul-
der, John E. LaughUn. BUI J. Bel-
cot. Joseph W Petteway, Calvin G.
Patterson, Samuel W. Brown, Sam-
mle L Morgan, Clatia Gregory,
Daniel F. McHughes and James R.
Ruhl.
Will Take Examinations
The local board also today Issued
the names of a group of five men
includid on a special call of farm-
ers for induction examinations list
of 26 men who have been notified
to report for physical examinations
on unannounced date.
The five men
| American 155-mm Long Toms open-
ed a heavy barrage in suppart of
{the attacking doughboys.
Far to the south, the French first
- 1 army cleared all German resist-
Aviatlon Cadet Ralph W. Romlne. ance from the west bank of the
United States army air forces, son I Rhine for a distance of 30 miles
of Mr. and Mrs W. R. Romlne of south of Strasbourg and closed in
,__ ^ | from the north and south on the
remnants of the Nazi pocket around
Solmar.
Patton's third army veterans pac-
ing the assault on the Nazi west
wall expanded their bridgehead
across the Ou rtvr t* : e.idth of
seven miles, with their vanguards
some five miles Inside Germany.
Gains in North
The biggest gains were carved out
at the northern . nd of the bridge-
head, where the Americans advanc-
ed on a five-mile front to take
Gross-Langenfeld and Heckushcheid
seven to right miles southeast of
St. Vith.
detachnvnt which was trying to
cross the Oder, destroying six of
the tanks and damaging others,"
the commentator, Wilfred von Of-
ten, said in a German home ser-
vice pep talk.
Moscow dispatches said Zhukov's
armor and mobile Infantry were
flooding across a broad beach of
the German border east of Berlin
and now were closing in on Frank-
furt and Kustrin to exploit the
gains of armored spearheads blaz-
ing the Soviet trail to Germany's
"Rhine of the East."
Both flanks of the Red army
' ^tuniii PHI
ACCORDING to reports, the Nazi high command has set up its headquarters in Munich, above, birth-
place of Nazism, having fled from Berlin as the Russians draw nearer and nearer to the Reich capi-1
tal. Accompanying this report are others of increasing unrest and food riots in the German capital.
Munich is about 225 miles southwest of Berlin (International).
Rangers “Crazy About Fighting”
By RALPH TEATSORTII
United PTess War Correspondent
GEN M'ARTHUR'S HEADQUAR-
late Coach Knutr
under the
Rockne.
____________ ____ _________________________ The second group under First Lt.
"which" had raced from the Vistula TERS, Luzon, Feb. 2. iUP>—At 7:45 William J. Connell of Boston,
to the Oder In three weeks were p m. Tuesday, a shot echoed through crawled for an hour and a half
fanning out In strength as the the Cabanatuan prison camp on
forces at the center of Zhukov'c Luzon and the battle for the liber-
offensive front massed on the Oder, ation of the imprisoned survivors
TJie German Transccean News of Bataan and Corregidor was on.
agency reported that "new and it lasted only 15 minutes. In
tremendous battles" were imminent that quarter hour, all 513 Ameri-
in the Oder-Warthe bend north- can and Allied prisoners were mov-
east of Berlin and In Silesia, where ed out of the camp and all 73 Ja-
Mor* than lftonoo American trrons • h°th sldes were throwing In fresh panese guards were killed knifed, agreement, was fired
More than 100.000 American troops forc,g and dedsjve tests of 8trength bayonetted or shot by *m»rican men whn had taken
to get into position for a frontal
assault on the main gate.
At 7:30 p.m. all forces were de-
ployed and ready to strike. Then
fallowed 15 minute* of tense wall-
ing, expeeling momentarily to be
discovered.
detail under First Lt. Melville H.
Schmidt of New Orleans, La, di-
rected them out of the stockade.
The first of Uie ragged, weary
prisoners emerged through the
gates only seven minutes after
the start of the attack and eight
minutes later all 513 had stum-
bled out into the darkness and
freedom.
When all were safely In the fields
on the homeward trek, 800 Japa-
nese came rushing down the main
were on the move across or up to
the German frontier on both sides
of the Our bridgehead on a line
extending from northeast of Mons-
chau down almost to the Luxem-
bourg border town of Vianden.
Cadet Romine
Kellyville, Okla. Is shown in the
Cushing Fish
Undernourished
Woodlawn PTA
Sponsors Annual
Washington Tea
The signal for the assault, by
by Murphy's road from Cabu, shouting and flr-
Amerlcan men, who had taken positions be- lng as they ran.
rangers and Filipino guerrilas.
The heavily-armed, bewhiskered
rangers, mos ly farm boys who
confessed they were "crazy about
fighting," started out on their
rescue mission Sunday. Scorning
helmets, they wore fatigue cans
me n,e „.e„ in class 2-C who alwve picture l^enkt the Lodwick
have been called for examination | feh100' cf, An^?„taUnf the Air " at
are: William C Luper. Harold B. ca> ,W6St °L he U under-
Loomis. James C. Alcorn, John A Lakeland, FI i.. training
McGuire and Russell H. Fisher. tr,a‘"ln/]fioth
Included in the third group are: ™e Lodw ck school, the 2160th -
aftSStS KSHSS3 SsHa: - — «-,
were prospective.
Front Line City
Stockholm relayed a dispatch
from Berlin saying:
"Berlin now is a front line city
in the fullest meaning of the term.
Berliners have been made to rea- _________
tlze that they must expect fighting ' at Jaunty angles,
in the streets. Working st'althily through the
"Barricades are being built fever- enemy lines, they reached a point
ishly in a number of streets, in- just north of the prison stockade
eluding the center of the city in late Tuesday afternoon after hiking
the presence of ihe bewildered on- 29 miles through overgrown
neath the rear guard tower. The
initial shot killed the guard, and
soon bedlam broke lose.
Rangers Theodore Richardson
(address unknown), in the van-
guard of Connell’s detachment,
advanced to blast the lock from
the prison gate, but at the crucial
moment the ammunition'clip fell
from his gun.
Richardson reached for his pis-
tol, but the Japanese sentry, re-
lookers. Th“ explosions from blow-
ing up bomb-wrecked houses are
adding to the fateful atmosphere,
and might soon m.rge with the
thunder of the guns in the east.
Noticeable Tension
"Berliners are deeply impressed
by the sight of marching volks-
sturm (home guard> units with
A
rice cot-ring from his amazement at ■
fields and clumps of woods. ihe rangers' appearance, knocked It]
Capt Robert W. Prince of Scat- from his hand Richardson re-
tie, Wash., led the actual attack, covered the pistol, however, killed
which was under the command of the sentry and blew off the gate
Pettit, Charles T. Evans, Charles
E. Pollock, Dcnald E. Heath, Her-Iln*
bert D. Watkins, Dick E. Woodrell,,Ala; .
James W. Daniel. Cadet
Romine, a graduate of
Jack H: Haught, Junior C. Tur- **«*• «?“ °tL^
ney. George F Harris, Fred Dun- was a wfat^ °^^ at smeara
• hark lamps w Orpffnrv Tamp* T pflrtmcnt of comni6rc6 a. Niagara
,back, James w. Gregory, James T-1 pj. Y. prior to joining the
_ , Dally, Lee R. Simmons, Clyde 8imp-1
CUSHING. Feb. 2 (U.B-Anglers I *>n. Murul D. Turner and Webster USAAT.
have finally found out what's wrong
] with the fish in the Cushing coun-
try lake.
They're suffering from malnu-
trition.
Dr. William H. Irwin, assistant
professer of zoology at Oklahoma
A and M college, has atiklyzed the
fishing situation at the lake and
reported that fertilizer and cata-
1 lyst and ammonia nitrate ahould be
added to the lake to glv« the fish
| the necessary vitamins
“I have heard statements from
our fishermen that they are catch-
ing fish with large htads and
small bodies." he said. “This Is
evidence of starvation.”
L. Stockton.
BOYS LIKE NEWSPAFERS
Weather
OKLAHOMA: Partly cloudy to
cloudy, light rain or drizzle ex-
treme east, slightly warmer to-
day. Partly cloudy to cloudy with
little change In temperature to-
night. Rain or snow in panhan-
dle. Lowest temperatures lower
40s south to lower 30s north.
Red Crow Work
Done At Texaco
Agee, president of the Woodlawn of the vendors.1
PTA unit. 11116 Voelklscher B<obachter, or-
A loudspeaking system will be in- B*h of the Nazi party, was quoted
stalled for the presentation of the in a German broadcast as saying:
program which is scheduled to be- "We will block the path of the
gin at 7:30 p.m The entertain- «nemy with such obstacles that he
ment for the evening will include a will be unable to overcome thf m
one-act comedy entitled "Big Sis- with such weak forces as have so
ter," which will be presented by *ar reached the eastern bank of
Lneut. Col. Henry A. Muccl, Bridge-
port, Conn.
He deployed 73 guerrillas to guard
the main road east of Ihe stock-
ade and 85 more to guard the road
west.
The rangers split Into two forces.
One group under First Lt. John
F Murphy of Springfield. Mass,
took two hours lo crawl into po-
sitions behind the stockade. Mur-
phy, who once ran for the Mas-
sachusetts state senate, was a
star quarterback at Notre Dame
lock.
Connell's men poured into the
stockade through the main gate,
while Mitrphy’s fortes burst
through the rear gate. A Japa-
nese barracks containing four
tanks was smashed with bazooka.*.
Grenades knocked out a billbox
The guerrillas guarding the
flank held their fire until the
Japanese got within range, then
opened up fire with a withering
barrage that stopped the enemy
rold.
Japanese bodies piled high as
Browning automatics cracked in the
hands of the sturdy Filipinos, who
wore jaunty straw hats and car-
ried cartridge belts over their
shoulders and grenades on their
belts.
More than 400 Japanese had
been killed by the time eight
enemy tanks appeared on the
srenc and pinned down the guer-
rillas. Just then, however, the
signal to withdraw was given and
the force crawled to safety. Cas-
ualties in the operation were 27
killed and three wounded.
The rangers carried ailing pris-
oners almost two miles to 20 waiting
carabao carts. The Japanese pur-
sued for an hour, but stopped at
containing eight Japanese.
The prisoners had Just retired for the Pampanga river,
the night, but they quickly were By the tlnie the mile and a
roused bv the rangers with cries of half long procession reached the
were Yanks!" First Lt. John 1 American lines, it had grown to
Dove of Hollywood, Calif., and a 51 carabao carts.
By United Press
I members of the PTA direcied by
I Mrs. James Prince. Also included
| on the program will be still pic-
tures portraying the young days of
. . Oeorge Washington presented by
Texaco Red Cross workers have students of the first and sec-
reported on the work accomplished 0nd grades, and group singing by
at their headquarters for 1944. other student groups under the
Workers made 43.076 surgical Wlllatalle^Hodges
dressings, 24 kit bags, nine robes,
Mitllla nnrl miiltf H ring* swosvws.miw — .
Tickets for the event will be on
sale beginning Monday. A prize
will be given to the girl and boy
Texaco stud60!* selling the most tickets
The prizes will be on exhibit at
the Oklahoma Natural Gas Co.
the Oder."
TELEGRAPH OFFICE SCENE
OF WARTIME DRAMAS
__ Pie and coffee will be served as
tacked*''two qulits and quilted one. re^e;,b™oenbs_
I according to the report.
To date, in 1945. busy workers
have made 3.596 surgical dressings
Workers meet at the
headquarters each Wednesday and.
NEW ORLEANS. Feb. 2. fU.R)—
The folks who work at the main of-
fice counters of the Western Union
here disagree about hospitals and
police wartime drama market. And
Police Issue A
Final Warning
according to those in charge, new
* im-
workers will be welcomed. The
Freezing mist made highways mediate project at Texaco will
roject at
te kit baf
Is was announced.
Proceeds from the affair will be
used to help In defraying the cost
The blank checks, pen and ink,
is ready and waiting at the city
police station for motorists who
they are not overlooking train and fail to gri their outo lights in per-
bus stations. feet shape before a group of state
They tell of the woman who had police move into this vicinity with-
a triegram frem her husband, just in the next 10 days, Chief of Po-
back from overseas, who said he lice J. O. Edwards, warned today,
would meet her in New Orleans. Approximately 20 state officials
but failed to say where. She are expect'd here to assist city
thought they could help. and county officers In the cam-
Then there was that rager cou- paign of ridding the highways in
pie of youngsters waiting at the this vicinity of autos with faulty
effort to decrease the
NORMAN. Feb. 2. OP) - The dippery in some sections of north- t0 complete kit bags.
home-town newspaper, which is ern and western Oklahoma today, j
road more today than ever by local but the highway patrol reported CAPT. PCRDIN TO TAKE
subscribers and even more thor- . . d . . . ^ BOMBER PILOT TRAINING -
oughly by local boys In the armed "° " LIBERAL. Kan-Capt Leon W.
forces, will retain its high position °‘ lcy condtlons. Purdln of Sapulpa, has been spe- Basketball Game
after the war, H. H. Herbert, dl- I Weatherman W. E. Maughan said cjaify selected for four-engine bom- .
rector of the University of Okla- the drizzling rain would continue ber pilot training and has been Scheduled 1 onignt
homa School of Journalism, pre- in some scctio.cs today and might transferred to Liberal army air _
diets turn into snow In the panhandle Held for instruction in flying Liber- j The gapuipa chieftains will meet 1 that
Numerous surveys, Herbert said, tqnlght. He said rain probably ator bombers the Danlel Wpbster five on the her husband In’New’Orleans’. . . (his community will soon be non-
had shown that next to letters would XaU in most areas of the C^t_Purdln will reoelte 15 weeks home court tonlght at 8 0'Ci0ck we final,y wer" able to locate him existent. "
in a conf'rence game. for her. We also got that tel' gram
! of installation of equipment lo con- counter for parental consent to lights in an
duct the hot lunch program at the come through, and with the mar- ratio of highway accidents caused
school riage license bureau closing in only by defective lights which Is re-
I _ an hour. corded as the cause of 70 per cent
The workers couldn't estimate of the accidents,
the number of forlorn and very Chief Edwanls stated "this is
broke servicemen who lingered our last warning, lt U expe*cted
about for hours waiting for money arrests will average approximately
from home. 1150 per day. so motorists, we mean
Chief clerk J. E Regan report'd business, when we say the traffic
that little wife looking for hazard due to defective lights In
Lights Out
Heck, no window shopping was
the complaint of the females who
ventured downtown in the cold
last night to view the local streets
"browned out" as Sapulpa joined
In the program ordered by the
war production board In most
places in the United States.
The streets locked dismal in- ■
deed with no theaters listing the
current showings in brilliant
lighting effects, no pictured cups
of steaming coffee and other in-
teresting signs representative of
businesses, and, of course, as we
said before, no lights permitting
us to enjoy our favorite pastime
of viewing with a glimmer of envy
the newest styles of the coming
season.
B J. Bratieny, manager of the
local O. O. & E„ stated the order
was met by everyone who under-
stood Its meaning, the few who
left their lights burning immedi-
ately discontinued their usage fol-
lowing instructions from lccal of-
fice personnel,
y --------
Pup Adopts
Durant Bus
DURANT. Feb. 2. tU.R)—‘The Du-
rant city bus line s No. 1 passenger
^ is a puppy, but a considerate one.
It never uses a seat, choosing to
curl up on the bus floor during
the trip.
The pup first appeared when Bill
Sands was driving the route to
the nearby navy air station. A
group of sailors coaxed the tiny
dog into the bus.
Now the pup boards the bus.
rides downtown, gets off for a
round of sightseeing, then hopa
on the bus on the next trip. Oc-
casionally. he hops off in some
residential section and wanders
around, catching a later bus.
On several evenings the pup rode
until quitting time—but he always
showed up next morning to re-
sume his travels.
from home, the home-town news- gtate Saturday. Minimum temper- of intensive training at this south
paper is the favorite reading ma- atures tonight arc expected to range west Kansas installation of the cen-
terial of men in the military ser- from the low 30s to the low 40s. tral Hying training command and
vices. The minimum last night was 28 upon graduation will receive the
- degrees at Guymon The maximum rating of "airplane commander."
OPA APPOINTEE yesterday was 40 at Ardmore and Capt. Purdln is the son of Mr
OKLAHOMA CITY, Feb. 2. (U.P) Elk City. and Mrs. W V Purdln and a gradu-
The district OPA olflce has an- The heaviest precipitation report- »ie of Sapulpa high school. He
nounced appointment of John N. ed was .03 inch at Elk City; Way- received his preliminary flying
Varnell, acting district price exe- noka reported .03. Traces of driz- training at Ballinger, Texas and
cutive. as the district OPA director zllng rain were recorded at Okla- San Angelo, Tixas. and won his
HAPPY RECNTpN
a"rw’,w CrAST—. ....... xSTSSK? ajjfyTS
trequently^lhj* Ktsrni. ^ «• «?S^c*£,5t SSJt « £ SKNSS- D*™,
Tnd death and S Edus L* Hightower. 31. Coldwater. yet, but the navy ha, a new ad- ed home on furlough recently from
Patient In fmm the w,r ani avv d'nart- Kan, Margaret V. Johnson. 30. mlral. Officials at the Fort Lewis their three separate camps, he
Hospital menu Jenks James H. Jackson. 21. Eu- Induction center recently signed elder Farmer said. "Just visiting
menus L ,« TuUn .1 it Van Arthur Admiral. Mount Vernon, for the first time In four years.
Tennett, 305 West McKinley ,h**dst.-m^®htcn^thlno^ Hk^ this Dvke 44 'osage Ruby Aired. 35. Wash., into the navy, after he tx- The sergeant, a veteran of 33 years
avenue, who has been removed »" ‘hose telllne something like this Dyke. 44. usage, nuoy »h*u.
cutive, as the district OPA director, zllng rain were recorded at Ukia- san Angero. i.xae, a.m wo.. ““ ."r, I" vDical o n "Stuunin home Love Tulsa:
He succeeds Joe Griffin who re-! hema City. Guymon. McAlester and wings and rommlsrion February 16. j Hlllcrest hospital In Tulsa for> treat- ypicai one. snipping notn
signed three months ago. Ponca City. , 1943, at Lubbock, texas. ment, Is reported critically 111. I to all Johnny.
this Dyke.
E E Caudle.
Bt Hows, 75, Sapulpa.
70, Ella
F. plained. "1 want to be sure to live of service, and the two young men
up to my name.” 1 had not been together since 1941.
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Sapulpa Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 30, No. 129, Ed. 1 Friday, February 2, 1945, newspaper, February 2, 1945; Sapulpa, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1528396/m1/1/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.