Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 51, No. 312, Ed. 1 Wednesday, May 21, 1941 Page: 1 of 22
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1
Evening except Sunday
NO. 312.
VOL. LI-
INAL HOME
PRICE FIVE CENTS
Lewis Branded
r
German Foothold
Pact Reached
Despot as Mine
In Crete Hinted
Talks Collapse
re-
•* >
*
Representative* of the operator* and union were to
I
I
u
d
in 1938
i*
i
parachute.' the prune min*
had heen stopped.)
u
■a
«»
He told
11
which
Twice as high as the First
flew less than
WASHINGTON. May 21—'^—
Peace
PLZABE
day
*' uee tax expert* declared month*
a
I
WASHINGTON. May 21
I
9
♦
»
Z
- A'
TO
slow to ac-
i
i
1
of Franco-
After
week
ttu*
n. already assigned to the air base fire station, started two weeks training at the
jn-ound on the Seagrave aerial ladder, is given, in the picture, to John J. Cherry,
I
5
■
J
a
*•
4
f
I
t
. I .
F *•
r • •
• C
I
♦
V
J
On Legislative
Redistricting
a ashington A*ks Petain Government to Put
'Collaboration* Intention* in a riling
Cvto later recanted.
Before the court art the week of
July T for hM electrocution al Sing
Prime
fvarned.
uation
o'clock.
“The method of the attack
stuka* ard MKwnrtail'^
by gliders
“All I
j wondfrfu. country
everyone
to which
-occupied
Bill Would Cut House
From 120 to 112;
Senate I nc hanged
*d
.1
fatal accident
TODAV IN
OKLAHOMA
4
"There
we I___
continue
i There
anvwhere
that Credj can be held
In Carlo, the middle eakt command-
■aid Oernan parachute and qir-borne
and'thalline d-tachment which pene-
trated the
was “quickly surrounded ap.d
an you» SOuL" Cvek trembled
deputies lad him away.
and parachute*
^fany Plane* < ra«h
Hermann B<Cand>a i
*a«
followed
more than 35 percent of the national
production—that the southerners were
bolting because they wanted to main-
tain unfair marketing advantages they
enjoyed in the industry. <Other Strike
Newt Page 7.i
---I---- ....
"I.
'•id
!•.i
l.
• il..
..auH
I >
It ' '
to die in the electric chair foe the
man ha*
himself.
Southern Coal Dispute Turned Over
To U. S. Mediation Board; Operators Sav
Inion Chief Seeks to Rule All Industry
\ *
\
r. •*”"
Nllil»:
UM4I*'
ftegnesds F
nitUfH
IrtUe
Air Base
Enlisted E-,. —
ore department. Fqyr enlisted
r'Ui..
City had 19 inch Tu*»-
cltv's total rainfall .
eotti-
tar cursing
Doomed Slayer Spit* at Judge
Without Benefit of God s Mercy
•F *
• di < if
S
airport. 1
The new [ *
transmitting tower*, of 900. 285 and
V"'
i
J ' y
"'UH
I 41
r ♦ * I a
YOU will find that it te an
. easy matter to sell odd piece*
of used furftiture. business ma-
chine* and many other Items
through* the Want Ada. It's
easy because so many-. rer«ona
are looking for the thing* you
no longer need They have the
caan and are Just waiting f-w
i to make an offer to aell
Make your offer
troop* ha|d Buffered “serious tosses
outskirts of Canea Tuesday
account -
i ed for “ £alro also revealed renew a]
Fool hoi <1
__ TURN TO
FAGS 2. COLUMN 1
> “
III"
11**
is
I w
■ mJ J Ji”
I “i ■
, which rises into the sir 459 feet. Thia
•lender spire of structural steel will
be more than 350 feet taller than the
WaAhintgon monument It will in-
crease the station'* orosdcasitng pow-
(J. Tired of False Pledges,
Demands Vichy Tell the Truth
WKY’s new antenna tower; j
stretched out on the street it
1 O< Al--M«-»l»
w'ea ■*•<«•
alarm, n»«
Rirh't i
•Awwsn
cbsBS, la
■craiY TxwrtBtTiiu
many One of the senators recalled a
conversation with the £----— *—
'“■fl
opposition to Germany and intimated j
that If the United tales refused to
The
aerial I
glider and
ister informed the house of commons
I bringing forward the running account
I he gave #, r-"* **—•
vaaion Tuesday.
T I
by 8 30
these had
The ho|uae
I Churchill
tee Wednesday, it was
ported.
VICHY. May 21.—(4*>—
Diplomatic nource* said
‘Wednesday they had been
. ?•
. 69
. «*
. at
. «3
• M
.«S
. as
. *8
M
M
M
went on
'The fighting continued and the ait-
wi is reported tn nand at C
&
M
I
By London R ad io
r. N Dl >n out-
’ intervention, said
The leather
_ „ _____ steadr ia »!*»,»•»«
Riehl an* Ti»n4l> art*
arabaMv i<»»»»«n»l ,k-w,r, »r t*an4*r-
' ae*b »*•««» *“ *
•TATB-l-MaaUT elae*-
•al TharMay *ritb
i sad il«ndgfit»f»*.
MBperatwre
Germans were delivered by
tn ns porta and sailed iu by passenger traffic to Iraq
day against a summer recess for
—T---• AnO-convoy senator*
said they would demand that
their colleagues stay on the job*
keep an, eye on turbulent
3,000 More Parachutists Are Ixindetl
ks Battle Gains Fierce Intensity; Sea
Attack Also Reported I nder av
ed the union’* new wage and working condition* contract.
— — — --Lewis made no personal reply
but hia official spokesman. K. C
Adams, said ‘'this advertising at-
tempt |of the feudal carpet-
bagging coal operators who. pre-
tending a southern gentleman's
status, try to elicit public sup-
port under the guise of patriot-
ism andj public welfare .. would
fill the old devil himself in dis-
gust*
Power Over All Indwalry
Adam* called the *outhemen “mock
patriots" land declared their economic
record dipcloaed In congressional in-
Meight of the main
tower may be viaualued
by realising that it will
be almost exactly twice
*• tall a* the top of the
beacon tower on the First
National Bank building.
Price Curb Move Seen
la White House Parley
WaaHINOTON. May 21—In-
AcaUoca were apparent Wednesday
that the administration was preparing
for *cuve measures to control prices
kbnulated by vast defense activities.
Thu was seen as the reason for a
White House conference between Pres-
Umt Roosevelt and Leon Henderson,
Bsd of the office of price administra-
te! and civilian supply.
(The Briti*h*raido. heard in New York, said it now
i that one or two sea-borne German troop transport*
penetrated the British defenses of Crete and indi-
cted th nt the Germans had gained at least a temporary foot-
1 160-miie-lohg island} including air fields. Berlin '
FIJBAFk ■■URN
FAGk 2 COLUMN I
_________-
1 minded to leave kt out ady-
I - ttmwcfel* Want Ad of your
own ... Just phone 3-1211 or
ante for Warn Ad eenieo.
a leading
I "Cliveden Mt" in Orest Britain which
was reputedly seeking to appease Oer-
Amencan-born I'battle 0!
the state highway patrol re-'
ported.
Dead from loss of blood and shock Is
Oeorge Robert Veal. 49 years old,
gatien. He died tn a Texarkana,
jut hospital Tuesday.
He Clifford Veal and Mildred Coff-
■tn all of Antlers, were riding in an
Artier* icbool bus with their left arms
promxhnii from the windows when It
toUided with a truck seven miles
sorth of that city.
Miidrtd Coffman » in serious con-
gtifln in a. Hugo hospital, her mang-
W lefi arm to be amputated the pa-
mi report stated. In a Parte. Texas,
texpttal. Clifford Veal was in serious
eondmon with a badly-torn left arm-
Charles M Veal. 43 years old. driver
ef the school bus and brother o( one
tf the victims, was uninjured, as was
Jun Adcock. 21 yean old. Texarkana,
fciver of the lumber truck.
Veal» death brings the May traffic
Al to 17. the year's 4o 171. compared
wah 34 and 160 for vear.
4am
5 a <ri
6 * m
? ft. m
• an
• am
tt: £
11 noon.
1 » a
J f »
f 1 W H
i 1 MH*«
r: *; *d ”
; n’l j 4
r*
E L. Sisson who was acquitted
Tuesday night on charges of obtaining
property under false pretenses by mis-
representing weight and grade of cot-
ton sold to the state penitentiary in
, -------1938 will be tried on another similar
'I l!*e French cruiser Emile Berlin charge
Walter Marlin, assistant county at-
torney. said the state has on file an-
mllea of the future municipal airport
near Bethany and neither civil aero-
wai batted down tn the upper w^w’pXii/^^nston^o/^^tr
crashed, i iso landed
ire no detail* yet Of courw
must rxpect that the fighting will ^*ln
:n increasing Mventy "
taa no evidence- of doubt
among London officialdom
Smoke Eaten Learn From the Men Who Know Best, City Firemen
men of the Will Rogers air base are gettinr their fire firhtingjessons first fn^JJe Oklahoma City
— -•••*.«•*.■ * *z^i riuiovcxJ 171 en. aiready assigned w tbw •;? •«—- starts, trre st
Antral fire station Wednesday. They’ll get theoreticaJ and practical traimni from 7 a. n?. to 5 p. m, five days a
*«ek- A workout. 40 feet above the ground on the Searrave aerial ladder, is given, in the picture, to John J. Cherry,
wr man on the ladder, and Wilfred E. Decker by Lieut. IL L. Le*i* of the truck company. (Story on page 2.)
ii'W
strangulation slaying of Mrs Cath-
, enne Pappas in her Bronx apart-
ment FrtM-uary 4. I
The sentence, imposed by Judge
James M Barrett was mandauxy
on the 24-year-old Harrisburg Pa .
hitchhiker's Mnvictlco for first de-
gree murder
teen accsued at robbing or raping
Sing pruon Cve< burst forth In a
bitter tirsdr
hate to say is this Thte is
here that
is talking about where , a
to admit a enme. to save'-’)
which he didn t commit “
calling Samuel J Foirv ,
district ittorney. “a damn liar and
being u;Oraided by Judge Barrett
the pnsoner. told tne
was ready for sentencing
eave out May God have
L- your soul ' berate if
CAIRO. Egvpt. May 21.—<T*>—Informed Greek
source* said they understood the British had the situ-
ation in Crete in hand early Wednesday morning, hut
thev nek note (edged that some invading units still were'”
fighting.
LOS’DON. May 21.—The battle fot the invaded
Greek island .of Crete is growing fiercer as German air-
borne shock troops keep (xiuring in. reliable sources declared
11’ -Ik • * r
with them sounded out American unoff ciallv—was 4.500 men. «'
Mntiment on Joining Great Britain in united Pr-s* cited other figures fi
opposition to Germany and intimated h nting at 8 500 to 11500 in-
help fight Hitler. Britain would be
forced to make some sort of alliance
with him.
"That was said under this capitol
roof,” the senator said.
Other FaetMs Cited
The senators based their belief in a
peace offensive on the following
grounds:
"Hitler has won in Europe He can b*y"whici|7aRbough available ohiy" id
take Gibraltar and Suex whenever he
gets ready. The war has practically anchorage
to some reports had sought to dte- - it is ckMMt to
' “V ’ ' 'airdromes f.______ __________ .. . _
Roosevelt postponed a are launching their sustained aepai Twin objections arose Wednes-
would reach from the north speech he originally had been ached- invasion uttempt
line of Main street to the mid- I---- 1 ’10 ,hel r
die of the 200 block—900 feet.
Oklahoma City Time
Jrinra gtaUM at Tte oaar "llllwn r aasww at —- Oklaasma cnx m-^T— FMIMTWW m sssrnS ssaas wall matte? «xJ«r tn* act Of March a irm.
Paid Cirmkuiofi Greater Than Any Other Evening Newspaper Published in Oklahoma
TWENTY-TWO PAGES—500 N. BROADWAY, OKLAHOMA CITY, WEDNESDAY, MAY 21. 1941
A legislative redistricting
bill which does not affect the
senate but reduces house
membership from 120 to 112
in the next session was agreed north of Oklahoma city.
°n biv t co"feren,;e
tee Wednesday, It was re- necessary by the airport development
now taking place here. The WKY
An attempt to alter senatorial transmitter now is within about two
district lines but leave the mem-
bership at IU present figure. 44,
“tn thi> HergelionB Csndiai and
Ret!mo ajvas. the attacks began at
five by parachutes and
reached a stalemaU'. except for the
fighting in Crete, which doera t King Gerfrge
amount to a damn "
Rudolph Hess No 3 Nasi.
National buildin a will be suddenly to Scotland, and according On the n<
V •— M ■ — ■ ■■Ao k.A i *• 4*
vu wvim a w |^*-*s wo a •vms w w * w w .
cuss peace terms. ' airdromes
President f
At that time, the senator said. Lord ________
and Lady Astor and thoM who were vasion for* made known in London—f
them sounded out ^American unoff cially—was 4.500 men t
chamber and its map will be un- uou's facilities so cIom to a major
changed I
• v [ The new plant will have three
Member to Evaey (Manty transmiumg tower* of 900 285 and
The house reductions are fy the 2M taliest wUl be the radia-
10-year period beginning with the for <Uv gnd h,
next election, in accordance with the
constitution. They call for 111 mem-
bers in the twentieth session. 112 in I
the twenty-first 113 in the twenty- |
second end 105 in the twenty-third.
The original house bill would have
consolidated 1C counties into five dis-
tricts with one representative each.
I baaed on population figures of the __
1940 census, but that was quickly re- ln.oU*r direction*.
Jected by the houM which thought
every county ought to have a member.
Seven Far Oklahoma Caaaty
These counties would have one rep-
resentative tn each of the next five
sessions Adair. Alfalfa. Atoka. Beav-
er. Harper. Beckham. Blaine Ca-
nadian. Cherokee Cimarron. Texas
Cleveland. Coal. Cotton. Craig. Custer.
Delaware. Dewey. Elite. Roger MU'*.
Grant. Greer. Hannon. Haskell. Jack-
son. Jefferson. Johnston. Kingfisher.
Kiowa. Latimer Logan. McClain. Mc-
Intosh. Major. Marshall. Love. Mayes.
Murray. Noble. Nowata. Okfuskee.
Pawnee. Pushmataha. Rogers. Ste-
phens. Sequoyah. Tlllmsn. Wagoner.
Washita Woods and Woodward.
The big counties of Oklahoma and
Tulaa would retain their seven repre- '
sentaUves, and Muskogee would con- !
tlnue to have three
Those with two each session would
be Caddo. Carter. Garfield, Grady.
LeFlore. McCurtain and Osage.
Would Vary With Sessions
Bryan would have two the first
three sessions, and one the last two;
Choctaw would have one, with two in
the twenty-second Comanche two for
three sessions, then dropping to one;
Creek, three for three sessions, then
two: Garvin, one except for the
twenty-second when it would get two.
Hughes would start with two and
drop to one the next four sessions:
Kay would have three in the twenty-
second snd two In the other four ses-
sions. Pontotoc's two would drop to er several fold,
one tn the last two periods; Pittsburg *~
would have two except for the twenty-
second when it would get three; Lin-
coln would have one except for the
twenty-second when it is listed for
two.
Okmulgee would get two. except for
three in the twnety-Mcond. Ottawa,
one the first two sessions, two for
the next two. and one in the twenty-
elght-stale Appalachian output and third; Payne, two for three sessions,
then one; Pottawatomie, three for
three sessions, then two; Seminole,
three for four sessions, then two.
Washington, one for three sessions the towers,
two in the twenty-second snd one in
the twenty-third.
NEW YORK, May 21.—UP)—Direct negotiations be-
tween gout hern soft coal operators and the United Mine
Workers of America (C. I. O.) broke off Wednesday amid an
gutburst of name-calling by both sides and the dispute over
contract terms was left to the national defense mediation
hoard for attempted settlement.
One* an Appeaser x inianai; auuiuuing mr iH’i* run
They recalled that Lady Astor was claimed the air-borne troops occupied several (Klints of Stra-
leading member of J.he Prr-»*J tegic injportance.) •-------- -----—
Bulletin
Technically known as a “full wave**
antenna, it will shoot WKY s pro-
grams into the ether at an effi-
ciency equal to IB kilowatts of out-;
put on the shorter "quarter-wave" I
antenna now in use. Thte will be done
i without increasing the five kilowatt*
of power now used.
Construction of the towers and
ne* buildings to house the trans-
mitting equipment will be begun im-
mediately. Date of completion » ex-
pected to be about November 1, but
Will depend upon delivery of steel for
which may be delayed
i somewhat by national defense pn-
iorities.
Beet with the board in Washington Friday;
Before the recess was announced, the southern opera-
ton asserted in a national newspaper advertisement cam-
paign that U. M- W. President John If*. Lewis would become
“dictator of this country” if the bituminous industry accept-
I!"
"Abou. 1.000 men were dropped and to keep an, eye on turbulent
>. m the greater part wf world affair*
teen accounted for* " ' __ '
,br2^e lnU> chrer* *na: would br required to complete legis-
lative action on the administration's
Z 83 500 000.000- tax bill
Senator Nye *FU 1
spoken opfionent <ff
he would oppose any suxxeatvxi that
congreaa quit for more than thrM
days’ at a time for fear of develop-*
menu which might bring thte coun-
try nearer to war
We can't afford to go away and
leave the ennvoy lmus hanging tn the i
air." Nye declared
He Mild he and others hoped to ob-
action later—after President
Roosevelt makes hl* view* known—on
a resolution by Senator Tobey <R . -
r_„ N H > to prohibit um of the navy to
guard war shipment* to belligerents
Senator McNary of Oregon, the mi-
no«ty leader also was understood to
have told sdminntrslloo lieutenants
that he could not agree to any lengthy
recess ’ •
o
Peace Move
Is in the Air,
Senators Say
WASHINGTON. May 21—<UP1
—Two senators—one a support-
er of administration foreign pol-
icy and the other a leading non-
interventionist—expressed belief
Wednesday that some peace
move is in the making in Eu-
rope.
The senators, who preferred not to
be identified but who have Jiad con- ednes^ay.
tact with leading Brttteh figures in
pre-war years, based thte belief on a
serlea of recent development*, cli- appear?
maxed by a statement of Lady Astor aJjio hat
that Great Britain Is "losing the war (
on the home front “ hoJd Qn
FORDYCE. Ark May 21 —OPv—
About 20 persons suffered minor hurts
early Wednesday in the crash of a
St. Louis southwestern (Cotton Belt I
passenger tram into a string Of box
ear* being switched from the Rock
Island lines to the Cotton Belt.
tteed stoijy of fair play and square-
dealing " ,
The southern group, rejecting the
contract formally approved Tuesday
by northern Appalachian operators,
said thelij chief reason was thte:
“By the very words of that contract
John L. Lewis will become what so
many believe he wants to be—dictator
of thte country A man potentially
more powerful by far than ths presi-
dent of the United States. A msn who
holds in the palm of hte hand the life
or death of every industry, the success
or failure of our entire defense pro-
gram. the comfort or hardship of the
bulk of o4ur citisens.”
Market Advantages Cited
The advertising campaign, launched
in eastern southern and midwest-
ert< cities, followed attacks on the
southern operators by Lewis and
Charles O'Neill. New York coal ex-
ecutive and spokesman for northern
operator* in the Appalachian joint
wage scale conference which tradi-
tionally has set wage and working .
standards for the entire country.
The southerners broke from the
conference last ipon th when they
found negotiations unsatisfactory and
contract terms unacceptable
Lewis and O'Neill asserted the
union and northern operators—thte
grodp produces 55 percent of the
- ,ur(’Url^n!.r“.iLSU±'
menced a. half past four p. m Tues-
Fatal ( rash
Shows Peril Of
Arm-Dangling
The common practice of rid-
with the left arm sticking
oat a car window Wednesday j
Md cost one state man his life,
5 woman her left arm and an-
other man a badly mangled arm. ! vestigations "belies their self-adver-
. . a_ . a________a.__s__1 atrwtwr rsf fair nlaw
(Continued Shouers
And Thunderstorms
Forecast for State
Despite the fact th* occasional
showers-he predicted for Tuesday
: turned into a genets! state deluge.
’Ham Wshlgrert Wednesday morning
again forecast ramdnal sh'-'-ser* or
thunderstorms for most of the stat*
... AU part* of the rtate «*re taept Ov
mcxierate . to i- hekvy rain* Tuewiay
and Tuesday nigftt. with nuee' than
•4 an. inch recorded m every section.
■ He*..eat fall. 5 10 inches was at Hdl-
l’ co j tte. and CUntop was aecend afth 4 IB
-•..Zi'toehea •,
•• North Canadian rfver att Can- .
■ ' tor. Wednesday wummg «**• reported
’’ a.t 8 feet and nstng Nine faet te flood
stage but the rise w not expected to
---- be vuIficteDt to bring the river that
.high
• j Oklahoma
day. making the
• Uni* vear to date 12 95 inef
pared with the norms’ bf IB SB inches.
-Ruin M*p ««i Fage 4.) . /
he gave ii with first ngws of ths in- ''
Lonvoy r ocs
of a second assault on Suda J
- cre“’w Say Congress
Canea the Island capital to which J U
Il of Naai-occupted ■">
Greece hi* shifted hte government, tel nn f
five miles from Buda bay Viflll I llvL vuiJ
rthwest corner of the island. <
the southern Greek
from which the German*
the purpose, in part, was to keep up
the morale of ths crew*
One theory advanced was that the
"exercises" constituted a veiled warn-
ing to the United States that the war-
‘ ships were ready to resist any at-
tempt to make the island a hemi-
sphere protectorate, should the course
, of Franco-German “collaboration" so
; warrant.
Another conjecture ,was that the
ships were making ready for a dash
through the British blockade for some
French ba« m Europe or north
Africa.
Syria Dee by Nasi* CRed
In the broader field « Franco- Xrw YORK May 21 - -
American relations, the United state* Oeorge Jcaeph Oek spat at the
r“_.U?drr*toOd 10 ?***? .*°* ra,u» as he was formally sentenced
complete* tn verbal pledges trans-
nutted to the state department by the
French envoy.
Permitting Naxi warplanes to um
air fields in French - m«na., gyri*
for operations against the Brttira m
of 5 ichy s acquiescence to dsniands
beyond Um lawn tenants at Um ar- grwnmrtter The youth ateo has
QUBr-’ ^iTa'othe? women in
teT* mM France-* action might m
cosMtnute a vtotenon at Um 1*34 con- CTUe’
brtwesa the French i___
AMSrtean republics, vhlch stipulate*
that no part of the mandated
lory ahouM be ‘piaead under control |
i pm,er" I
'/ tv I
Talleat in the U. S.
WKY fo Build
New Tower
900 Feet High
rpHE tallest antenna tower in
1 the United States—900 feet
—will radiate the radio pro-
gram* transmitted by WKY. the
Oklahoma and Times station,
when a new transmitter station
authorized Tuesday by the fed-
eral communications commis-
sion is completed. \
The new site te about six miles
Aemovsl
He Us in sentenced Oa* owutUng
I the phmse
ted him away.
The sneering defendant. «•«***’? things g? like
Byrnea^acung detecUve lieutenant. way. replied J-dge Banet:
May God' have mercy
M ine I
programs,
and the twq shorter shafts will be
used at night to convert
“ the antenna system into
directions! transmit-
ter incrrssir.g it* range MBMHIIl
■ n cr:-*m predetermined
cir-ctions snd reducing
" "4" s^wM
1940 census, but that was quickly re-
Minister Churchill
meanwhile, that the
__ Crete would continue
Britteh peereas when she visited here with "increasing aeverity.’* . I
41 Least 4.5M Land
The laUrt total of the German in- ■
informed that German mil-
itary equipment it rolling
across Turkey into Iraq by
railroad., , (Istanbul said
court be i
then sullenly shouted
"But
1 merey to your aoui. aocataa* bi. —
there wm a God be wouldn't let yto
**»d by tex dsputaes spat first at Edward
E_______ “ —"TE
•wrl- who tocauwd two confession* which
I
WASHINGTON, May 21 — (JP> — The United States, It was half past
learned authoritatively Wednesday, has qiade the equivalent of a ittlnL!/1 mkny 01 whl h
diplomatic call on the Vichy government for a forthright declaru- '”** “
tlon of France** future intention* in “collaborating" with Germany
Vichy ha* been given to understand, it was said, that it can-
not hope to restore Franco-American relations to harmony unless
it is first prepared to supply full assurances in writing that France
will hold rigidly to the terms of the June, 1940. armistice in all
subsequent dealings with the third reich
Secretary Hulls sternly-worded «*-♦--------------------
I pun*uon of C 8 View, to French Sia*on. Freed in One
Ambassador Henry-Haw contained
the diplomatic cue. informed sources Ga*C, Face* Second Trial ,
asserted, that a formal note putting . _1<KZW, .
France on record, te the only solu- E R 8ltton who
j Uon.*
The uncertainty over French in-
tentions. meanwhile, increased over-
night with the news from Martinique
land the aircraft carrier Beam had
■ beer, out to sea for what the com-
manding admiral called routine ex- other case charging that Sisnon mls-
i erases ” represented grade and weight of an- .
Informed sources were slow to ac- oth*r 100 bak* ot cottfl° *°ld lh*
; cept the Martinique explanation that Penlt<nU*,T *
Rail Crash Hurts 20 j » «
a 9 m
1 » m
Ism
9pm
!0 s m
11 9 m
12 «udni<r.
lam .
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w I 3 * 91
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 51, No. 312, Ed. 1 Wednesday, May 21, 1941, newspaper, May 21, 1941; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1759529/m1/1/: accessed June 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.