Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 51, No. 53, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 23, 1940 Page: 3 of 16
sixteen pages : ill. ; page 27 x 23 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
M
* C
■
♦
.W^raE^MfcsMl
.«*■** *
**
*■’ < A <3SI
of the German conquest and govern-
ment reorganisation. Bradl will be the
in hia forthcoming tour.
German radio reports from Berlin
The Smoking Car
3 f.
French Envoy to Brazil
*ExplaintT Chautemps Trip
mo di Janeiro, July
Jules Henry, French ambassador. in-
formed the Brazilian foreign ministry
Tuesday the mission of Camille Chau-
tetnpe will be confined to giving
French diplomata in South America
“ accurate, clear view of the poll-
Ucsl position" of France as a result
DONALD DUCK
z
•a
•1
Buff, Puff
ered a candidate for a leather-
tanged, sandpaper-voiced drill
ggrgeant — and maybe he
wasn't—but Hulbert Newton
Bnmmell, above, left, 68 years
eld, 2807 Classen boulevard,
stepped up and bared his vocal
apparatus to the flashlighted
mutiny of Dr. James P.
Luton, 3225 Northwest Twen-
ty-first street, Monday night
as 256 Oklahoma City men
started the defense training
council toughenlng-up pro-
gram at Taft stadium. In the
lower photo, B. C. French,
1508 Northwest Twenty-sev-
enth street, is giving serious
thought to some calisthenics
and concluding that this
toughening (puff-puff) pro-
gram is made for guys who are
tough (puff-puff) to start
with.
I
ANV
toj
o
00
to
TO,
#4
. o o
&
°o
,0.0
of a
the
open
Property Owners’
Protest on Lincoln
Park Line Starts
Move for Delay
hearings on State
>rimary Election
Wests Arc Delayed
Hearing! on three primary election
protest* were postponed until Tues-
day afternoon by the state election
board because Albert C. Hunt, rhalr-
man, was unable to reach the city in
time.
The protesta and recount demands
were filed by;
Joseph A. Moran. Tulsa, against
Joe Chambers, Tulsa, winner of the
Tulsa county second district house
race.
June Bliss, Tahlequah, against Paul
V. Carlile. Vian, winner of the 8e-
quoyah-Adalr-Cherokee county senate
race. Bliss challenged the vote count
in Sequoyah and Adair counties and
Carlile replied with a protest in Cher-
okee eounty.
J. M. Rasberry, Weleetka, against
Glen D. Johnson. Okemah, winner of
the Okfuskee county house race.
A. L. Jeffrey, municipal counselor,
was instructed Tuesday by the city
council to apply to the state corpora-
tion commission for a postponement
of the hearing set for Thursday on re-
quest of the Oklahoma Railway Co.
for permission to abandon several of
its street car lines.
Council action was taken to gain
time Tor more consideration of sev-
eral problems in which the city gov-
ernment is interested.**
If the delay to denied. Jeffrey was
instructed to “point out the need for
continuance of service, particularly in
districts where bus lines cannot now
follow the same routes that street cars
have used.**
Street Week Demanded Flrot
Formal presentation to the council
protest by property owners along
Lincoln jparir street car route
- the discussion. Protect was
based on the gift by owners of a right
of way for tracks, and for a wide
boulevard parallel to the tracks.
“If the line to maintained as at
present until the boulevard is opened
*nd paved so bus lines can be in-
stalled along the same route where
•o®* heavy home investments have
been made, there will be no further
objection on our part," the pro tester, ts
They added that the state highway
commission now has plans to pave the
boulevard at “an early date
■as Line Difficulty Seen
A similar situation exists along the
Bhartel streetcar line north of North-
west Twenty-sixth street, said A. P.
Van Meter, ward one.
_ TT* street alon< «**t side of
Fairlawn cemetery has never been
paved, and it would be impossible to
run buses along the same route if the
•trevtcara are withdrawn.** he said.
_,The. clt? P*rk board already is on
record with a protest against the rail-
y Jw^teulwa S— ——— • — **
,f b™r^cTto in.
hX'?i.’ta0Uld *00 *year around* i
Sixteen Students
Make Their First
Solo Flights
Five Others at Airports
Enter Final Stage Of
Civilian Training
““Sixteen college students made soto
nights and five more moved into the
final stage of their flight training
Tuesday in the summer training pro-
gram sponsored by the civil aero-
nautics authority.
Six solo flights were made by Okla-
homa City University students Mon-
day and Tuesday at Municipal air-
port, where Haskell Shaw to In charge
of the flight training for that school.
The youths making their first flights
alone were John Foster, Clarence
Mitchell. Gene Neville. Joseph South-
well. Gene Salmon and Jack M<“-
Duffey.
At the University of Oklahoma. 10
T in—as students passed their solo teste at
om^>n^rt5*!8»y^r^round ” Bn<1 t*®’ Nonnan Municipal airport. They are
nmnvnrtM w -------- . . Dorman Landtroop, Jack Collier, Rex
Lafferty, Cecil Dorsett. Frank Roff,
William Barrowman. Claude Culp.
James Fishburn, Clarence Gregg and
Fred Stalder.
Six students from Central State
college. Edmond, began work on their
final flight training, stage 02 in
preparation to tests for their private
licenses at Wiley Post airport. They
are Miner Hays, Pat Dunlop and Joe
Staley, all of Oklahoma City; Luther
Cook, Wilson- and Charles Caldwell.
Stillwater.
Eyes Sore? Tired?
Here’s prompt relief! Bathe eyes with
Lavoptlk. Burning. Inflammation, sore-
ness. tired, strained feeling. Itching
from local irritations all relieved. Also
eools. soothes, refreshes. No harmful
druga 26 years success. Get Lavoptlk
today. (Eye cup Included.) All druggists
™?r Bvrgiar-Proof “X
Clearview’! STR EL leavret (or
leave*) make* ewtrr ihrewh
sees Windows Imsoeelble.
CLEARVIEW
PIONEER Manufacturing Co.
ISIS N. W. Mb BL S-Slft
For Willkie
«tm believe hC
TuUa*former
president of the General Fed-
eration of Women’s Clubs of
America, said she la gtlll a
she u glVing her
support to the Republican
presidential nominee with a
‘clear conjirUn-. *
By Monte Barrett and Russell Ross
9
SV4£
r,
0
I
A
O
77
fawvnw heB
Thai
.
ML
nauM
.♦
UPTON .
3
o) I
•) •
m urveert oarung.^
and macm gays rr j
COSTS ONLY HALF A
CWT A CLASS?je
eg*
CAW
ITO
1.
she alumys says to
KCOMOMlZft 1
CAN'T PLBASS
'EM BOTH
< Tbofl K8D
TSA IS SWELL1
l Mar rvs
\ cvsa HAP*
d €
n
■
I WHY, MAGGi
to sarrLC'__
BUY UPTONS TEA -T
lux THAT GRANO, P
\ FLAMCa AND UPTO
X. I® COQNOMtCAAf
^A>?s ao Rarrwea
^^1-YOU Uli
__ < Lam TCA* )
N, ’4
Ik ■
WW '..nlSw
ERV< MRS. aWSUJW
isrs-Lo oi
TO VMOQkf
□Af/ _
A'i
7^ I’MWurmNS! hfs
- J always nagging for
----- I BCTTCa TEA. AND
mb-
/MAGGiS' >
/WM£«. AM
f YOU GONG’
£o°J
b2 o o
■ ■ ''I d
<
A
,)
i
(X)Ak.T~T>*kMw4^
I
I
W-
.'’y.
Y'WVC’A
FAd-L OFFJ i
F
A
Council Votes to Request Delay
-
In Trolley Abandonment Hearing
tu:
AY, JULY 23, 1940—THREE
JKi
r 1
I
acrsM
i
’«
t
BE
Bus Taxation Sought
J- P’ McCarty. Democratic nominee
for the house from Oklahoma county’s
seventh district, announced Tuesday
lopiMh Wtalatlon next year
*7
Chinese Report 1,000
Air Raid CsroaltiM .
CHUNGKING, China. July
(VP>—Air defense officials said Tues-
day Japanese planes Monday killed or
*'*“ded 1.000 civilians in air raids, s— - r—
Bnd Klkl*nE. 30 miles : fo«* "equalling" truck and bus taxes,
torth and 50 miles south, respectively. Under present schedules, small ope-
of Chungking raters of oU truck lines are paying
Hck-VZM cUUned Japanese raided 9’*,“®* r*tes “ owners of large in-
h ^kiang after their *™** t™ck .nd bus lines, and
drlwn ftxMn Chung- *11 breaking them." he explained,
t with a loss of two scout craft. McCarty said he also will sponsor a
‘ bill to vitalise police pensions.
THEM ABOUT CORNS
/»w
/^OkNS are caused by preeeure and frtc-
two which pack a thickened mass of
dead cells into a hard plug. The base of this
plug often presses on sensitive nerves —
causing intense pain. Home paring can only
give temporary relief because it only affects
the uppermost section of the corn-end
home paring means risk of serious infection.
But now clinical tests prove it’s easy to
remove corns. Just fit a Blue-Jay pad neatly
over the corn—it relieves pain promptly by
on corn—gently loosens it aoit can be lifted
out. Then simply by avoiding the pressure
and friction which caused your corn, you
can prevent its return.
Don’t suffer needlessly. Get quick, last-
ing relief by getting Blue-Jay Corn Plasters
today. Only 25f for 6.
-"'B LIEJAY™
A
(
PM
I:
I k
k-W
11
!¥l
I />f lsavin'this
MADHOUSE!
r
J
■
AFTER
rr 1
kls
CHTYINNI. wyo, Jttfy
Wendell L. VZillkte. starting .a two
day swing through northern Colo-
rado. Wyoming and Utah, said Tues-
day that “in this country there to no
such thing as the indispensable man "
Willkie made his remark to a crowd
at Brighton. Co’o. He spoke from th-
reat platform of a train bearing him
to Chere^ne to attend the frontier
dare ro^go.
The Republican oresidenUal nomi-
nee asserted that “I know It was a
series of circumstances” that caused
him to be nominated for president.
"X know that there are thousands of
men Qualified for any position public
or private,** be continued. •'There are
many, many men who are qualified. In
thia country there is no such thing as
the indispensable man.
„ “The very an race of democracy to
that it develops the initiative and the
energies of men."
At an impromptu nren conference
on his private car. Willkie announced
that Raymond L Buell of Fortune
magailne would work with Russell
Davenport, a former Fortune editor
In his behalf.
Willkie announced also that Lem
Jones of Davenport. Iowa, former press
repmentaUve for Thomas K Dewey,
would serve as his press representative
Willkie Declares
Nation Has No
Indispensable Man
Republican Nominee
^tartfl Two-Day Tour
In Northwest
t
■ F
7--------------
--
O ’ r- -I- ■
schilcL
CLOTHES
5OW . ..
.1/
c
I 4
4
; <
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
1
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
<
I
4
4
«
4
<
4
d
4
4
I
«
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
<
4
<
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
I 4
4
4
4
4
4
4
«
4
4
4
4
4
<
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
1 A
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
<
4
4
4
4
4
I
<
4
4
4
4
4
4
<
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
1
4
4
4
4
4
4
<-w w
ICOBI'S
4 OATS
SOCKS
I
I
I
I
►
I
I
I
s
I
5
5
b
b
b
>
b
b
b
b
b
b
b
I
I
b
b
b
b
I
b
b
b
b
I
b
b
b
b
b
b
b
b
b
»
b
b
b
b
b
b
b
5
b
b
b
b
b
b
b
b
b
b
I
b
»
b
b
b
►
»
b
• ►
»
b
b
b
b
b
b
b
b
b
b
b
b
b
b
b
b
b
b
b
»
b
»
»
►
»
►
>
b
itoriisciiii.irs
■ran i:-¥EAKI.Y
SALE
MAIN A (<j HARVEY
^ent/emenf
b
b
►
b
►
►
»
b
►
►
»
b
b
:i
►
b
b
>
b
►
b
►
b
►
»
*
b
»
»
b
> i
►'
ME.VS SI ITS
5IE.VS SLA4 KS
PAI'LY SIIII'TS
PAULY PAJAMAS
ELASTO TIES
11E.VS I AIIE11W E AIC
3IEVS SIKIES
5IEVS STIIAW HATS
ME VS SWLM TI'IAKS
51 EX’S HEATH
HEX’S SPOItT
HEX’S SLA4 K
*H«S THE
I-mi. 1.1-1. Ck:
A
<
1
»'
w
ESS...
T
■
J?
^-s
T,._.
tiUi(
• ■
—
a
'AV
■
», To kj.
atoemeo, ,
4
“TO*
• •••wAF’
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 51, No. 53, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 23, 1940, newspaper, July 23, 1940; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1759270/m1/3/: accessed July 16, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.