Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 51, No. 190, Ed. 1 Monday, December 30, 1940 Page: 7 of 16
sixteen pages : ill. ; page 27 x 23 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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WASHINGTON. JD*e. ^—(TH-The
Rom Thompson. Tulsa. as vice chair-
men of Topeka federal borne loan
bank, effective January 1. Paul F.
Good. Lincoln, Neb., was reappointed
chairmen.
JflDDLE-AfiE;
WOMEN [»]
wwm Tma aovxBiAgjmjg}-
often
^Za'a^d take Lydia K
recetabia Ccmesena- r
ear. Plnkham • Comj
C/irictmat Trees Will
Feed Husker Bonfire
LINCOLN, Neb.. Dec. JO — /?<—Vnl-
versky of Nebraska etudento have
•olved the Inevitable what-to-do-wlth-
the-Chnstma* tree problem for Lin-
coln residents. . ,____
Boy Scout* will father them f^m
front porchee and when the football
team return* January • from the Rose
bowl fame with Stanford the three*
will be fuel for a bonfire at the wel-
coming rally.
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Safe Is Cracked, 8420 Stolen T™
Bryan-Hail-McDaniel, Inc., 846 Northwest Second street, came
to work Sunday morning she noticed something wrong with
the safe, namely: it had a big hole in the side. Police Monday
mid the job was done with an Implement strongly resembling
a can opener, on a larger and stronger scale. To get to the
afe, the burglar dropped through a skylight and knocked the
knob off a large vault. His efforts resulted in a profit of $420.
teckfcr: Tm painting Um little
*» Tsar."
*tter: "That doesn't look like
*nhma. Hom, m show you how to
Miat t tree.**
If minting and drawing ara
*° become an avenue of mlf-
**erution for a child, he
***t bo allowed to choose hie
MAjeoM.
Horse Sense
Uf DR. GKOBGK W. CRANK
fateet Um *niwtn which y«« ewn-
Sw tert. The lart problem eoont* ft
•tote. Then look for Um correct an-
ewi aa page S.
* L la which species is the father
Med a bull, the mother a cow. but
to baby a puppy? Cattle, Penguins,
, kah. Whelm.
I Bordeaux mixture should make
as think of Hearn Paint. Face Cream.
Ckttto Mash, Garden Spray.
1 You should be most likely to as-
■date horses with which one of the
Mowing? Mosmoou. Bassoon, Dra-
jmb, TyphoB®.
C A plumb bob is most likely to be t
M by a Carpenter. Hair Dresser,
Mghing Party. Barter.
I. If you were served from a tureen,
k Rich course of the dinner would it
P W? CeektaK, Soup. Salad. Dessert.
t. Thl* problem tests your fa-
■Qiartty with five current aporta
hen if you are not weU acquainted
tth all of them, you can use your
tone sense and figure out most of
St answers by process of elimination.
T« deserve 1 point for each correct
■itching of sport with the inatru-
■nt generally linked with IL
to Polo
to Track
to Badminton
K) Billiards
to Golf
(v) Javelin
(w) Niblick
(x) Cue
(y) Shuttlecock
__ <■> Mallet
Beers yeoreeif aa fellows: •■>, poor;
H average; 7-A sapertor: S-iS. rery
Bparisr. (Note—The teat qeeeUen
■ent* I pointe.)
RitM Henrr Lytal, 68-
nilCb 0CV year-old pioneer
Oklahoman, died at his home,
2020 Northwest Twenty-sec-
ond street, Sunday night aft-
er a week’s Illness.
In 1918, he built the First
National bank In Braggs, Mus-
kogee county. Later he en-
tered the land and oil busi-
ness in Henryetta, and 13
years ago moved to Oklahoma
City. He camo to Oklahoma In
1895.
Services are tentatively set
for 2 p. m. Tuesday in the
” Smith and Kemke funeral
homo with burial in Memorial
Park cemetery.
Maghtar; “What shall X paint,
CALLS FOR A
CALL
HENRY
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New Y«ir’« Ev<
Corsage
2-2128 NOW!
ptmM rau teitvwrt
Mr. and Mrs. James Haugh. Topeka.
RJ SOOTHES CHAFED SKIN
WHITE PETROLEUM JELLY *£/
11>
Accident Fatal To
Boy Increases Gty
Total to 16, Same
As Year Ago
Paced by the fatal injury of an
Oklahoma Ctty boy. state traffic fa-
talities during the weekend mounted
to seven before midnight Bunday and
left Oklahoma's IMS life-saving mar-
gin only four.
Death of Ralph Eugene Bishop,
•-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. W. W.
Bishop. M0 block Boutbeast Bgiit-
eenth street, beneath the wheels of an
ice truck near his home Bunday morn-
ing was the sixteenth fatality in the
city this year, equalinc the toil at the
same time in IBM. It raised the
county total to M, however, one above
last year.
The state total was M for the
month and 471 for the year, as com-
pared with <1 and 4B3 last year.
Other weekend deaths reported by
the state highway patrol:
LUCY BRUNKR, tl years old. Sem-
inole. pedestrian instantly killed two
miles north of Ryan. Jackson county.
<m U. 8. highway No. $1 at 11:4ft p. m.
Saturday.
Wid wntc.. ochbN. tbeekhftarnnorreptb
HAROLD MORGAN, 3ft years old,
route 7, city, who died in University
hospital of injuries suffered Decem-
ber JO in a truck-automobile collision
near Purcell.
CHARLES HOPSON, M years old.
Fort Towson, who died in a Paris.
Texas, hospital of injuries suffered
early Sunday when he was struck by
an automobils on a Fort Towson
street.
HENRY B. HARP. «1 years old,,
Boynton. Muskogee county, fatally in-
jured Sunday .light when his auto-
mobile left a Mghwa..
MELVIN A. BAKER, 14 years old.
Waurika, killed when struck by a
gravel truck aa ho attempted to cross
the highway from behind another
truck.
MRS. HELEN BLACKWOOD. 34
years old. Lawton. who died Satur-
day of injuries suffered when a car
in which she was riding left a road
near Port 8111 Christmas day.
Funeral for the Bishop child, a 4B
grade student at Wheeler school, will
be held at 10 a. m Tuesday in Cen-
tral Avenue Free-Will Baptist church.
The Capitol Hill funeral home will be
in charge. Burial will be in Bristow.
Family Mutters 27 For
Reunion After 15 Years
Twenty-seven members of the L. K.
Haugh family of Abilene, Kan., met
for a family reunion during the week-
end in the home of a daughter. Mrs.
Irene Young. 1306 Southwest Twenty-
fourth streeL for the first time in
1ft years.
Children of Mr. and Mrs. L E.
Haugh who attended were their four
daughters and their families. Mr. and
Mrs. G. R Ming. Abilene; Mr. and
Mrs. Buell Davis, Britton; Mrs. Young
and a daughter. Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Wright, city; and three sons and
their families, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
Haugh. Kiowa, Kan.; Mr. and Mrs.
fr*7 **y *** TTsms sells wets psprs fat Otlahsssa City thss tksrs ara tea*
Weekend Auto Deaths
In State Rise to Seven
__ ■ ■ ■ ■ _________________________
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RADIO CORPORATION of AMERICA
NEW YORK
RADIO CITY llffi
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By Charlie Plumb
Two Sides to Everything
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The broadcasting eervice of NBC fo abo maintained
Internationally, by short wave, and helps to strengthen
good-will and cultural and economic relations between
the Americas, and with other parts of the world.
An informed public opinion, promoted by a free press
and a free system of broadcasting, is an important national
asset in total defense.
With characteristic speed, radio is responding to ths
eaD of national defense. Enrolled to servo the publie
interest and to fortify the Nation’s invisible life-lines of
communication are: Research, Engineering, Manufac-
turing, Broadcasting, International Circuits, Ship-and-
Sbore Stations. The Radio Corporation of America waa
organised in 1919, as an American-owned, American-
Vrtnf C
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Radio Answers the Call
• s
MANUFACTURING
The RCA Manufacturing Company operates five large
plants, strategically located at Camden and Harrison, N. J.,
Indianapolis and Bloomington, Ind., and Hollywood, Calif.
Within the year the company has invested millions of
dollars in expansion to facilitate production and rapid
filling of orders from the Army and Navy. Machinery is
geared for national defense in addition to providing for
normal requirements of the public.
WORLD-WIDE COMMUNICATIONS
Vital to defense and commerce, RCA operates 24-hour
direct communication service to 43 countries. This service
•voids the censorship, errors, and delays which might
occur at relay points. The Nation is protected against the
loss of overseas communications through the cutting of
submarine cables in war-time. Supplementing these globe*
girdling channels, RCA operates a domestic radiotelegraph
system that links 12 key cities in the United States.
of Total Defense
*
f * . •
MARINE COMMUNICATIONS
%
Life and property at sea are guarded by modern radio
coastal stations and radio-equipped ships. Eighteen hun-
dred American ships are equipped with RCA apparatus.
The shore-lines of the United States are fringed with
radio beacon transmitters to guide the fleet and shipping
in American waters. American ships do not have to depend
upon foreign-controlled means of communication to send
RCA continues to scree the public interest and io
fhlly prepared and ready to carry on in the first
line of total defense!
RESEARCH AND ENGINEERING
Through science and research, the RCA Laboratories are
enrolled in national defense. Research in electronica, wavs
propagation, televiaion, facsimile, acoustics, optics, and
in other fields has opened new services and extended the
scope of existing services, both commercial and military.
No longer must an aviator ’’just look to the ground** to
find his way to a target or to his base. He may fly and land
"blind” by radio. The electron microscope, a product of
RCA Laboratories, is a new means to help protect the
national welfare aa it opens new horixons for bacteriologist,
chemist, physicist and industrialist In these and many
other ways, peace-time radio research has built new
bulwarks of defense for our Nation.
controlled radio company. RCA has established a
world-wide communications system, independent of
all foreign interests, and has pioneered in the creation
and development of a new art and a new industry.
Today, each of its services is equipped and ready for
action in the first line of America's total defense on
land, sea, and in the air.
. .ME. t
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BROADCASTING
RCA pioneered in establishing the first coast-to-coast
network of broadcasting. The National Broadcasting
Company, formed in 1926, today serves an American
raHin audience through 50,000,000 receiving seta*. NBC
provides these listeners with serious and popular music,
news and information, drama and education, public
forunu and religious services. Under the American sys-
tem of broadcasting, the finest and most extensive variety
of programs to be had anywhere in the world is free to
the listening public. Ths richest man <
poorest man gets free by radio.
MONDAY, DECEMBER 30, 1940-SEVEN ‘
RCA CALLS THE ROLL OF ITS SERVICES TO THE NATION:
INVENTIONS AND THEIS USE
RCA licenses manv manufacturers to use its inventions
and patents. By making them widely available, RCA has
helped to create an industry as well as an art
Through this licensing policy th* radio industry has
access to results of the research of RCA Laboratories. In
this way, competition has been stimulated, and numerou*
sources of supply ope ned to the public and the Government
TRAINING
Mor* than 1,100 students are enrolled in the completely
equipped schools of the RCA Institutes, Inc., in New York
and Chicago. From this enrollment and from graduatea
of the Institutes, the United State* can enlist the service*
of trained men in all branches of radio, from ship operators
to service men. Scientists and engineers associated with
RCA present and publish hundreds of scientific papers
each year aa aids to others interested in radio. For thoe*
who follow technical developments of the art, RCA
Review, a quarterly journal, prints the latest scientific
reports on progress in radio.
„’LOYEES
Labor relation* between RCA and its employee* are
excellent. Employment in the RCA organization in 1940
increased from 22,006 to 27,000 employees. Principal
officers and many employee* of RCA are members of th*
Army and Navy Reserve*.
For 21 years the pioneering efforts and services of
THE SERVICES OF RCA: RCA MANUFACTURING COMPANY, INC.
________ NATIONAL BROADCASTING COMPANY, ING R. G A. COMMUNICATIONS, ING
Cagy, Isn't He?
RADIOMARINE CORPORATION OF AMERICA RCA LABORATORIES
RCA INSTITUTES, ING ___________
By Carl Anderson
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 51, No. 190, Ed. 1 Monday, December 30, 1940, newspaper, December 30, 1940; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1759407/m1/7/: accessed July 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.