Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 53, No. 207, Ed. 1 Tuesday, January 19, 1943 Page: 1 of 16
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Oklahoma City Times and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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i
BUY
NDS
VOL. Lin. NO. 207.
PRICE FIVE CENTS
J
Plants
m
a drop in gaa
*
the attack, the axis had only a matter of hours in which
T,
*
f
Urao.
tn Um town."
axle-
cold wave In general, re-
fled around
with
Yanka* New Vlrtims
lUN
Aran
rraa
• *-
1
YARBROUGH.
LL<1
W a
For Industrial
City
across Um Sanananda track a mile
and a half from the coart thin apUt>
reeled Ttewtej.
Pavel Koetaneatov com-
manded the garrison which took all
Only Three Buildings
Are Big Enongh
as
M
I
I
Chief Orders
Miners on Job
a. ■
a. m
*st
a. ■
:*
- I
I
I
Federal Office
Hunt Limited
Pf-
O
Ground Is Won
By Axis Forces
.vaa
jw
al
Lh
lit.
he
io.
ha
wo
n<
id
tic
>m
3’1
da
rra
m
at
:t,
of
ra
id
4H
5=3
t 4
1
If
.'O
!h
ra
er ’
y •
after he took
•wedss in 1W.
tewg • csnrtet prison and Mftofal Lew-
Oklahoma City Times
--Graattr TUa Aay Other Erwin, N.w,Mp.r PabUUW ta ‘
Puppy Dies
In Blaze Set
By Dog Hater
Owner Says Burning
la Third. Attempt
To Kill Hia Pets
st
it
* i
11
le
IfAMANANQA
On
J
DO I SELL GUNS- That’s one
of Um easiest things I have to do
A gentleman who needed some
eaeh in a burry offered his old
•botkun for sale. I found him a
buyer—tn fact more than M of
them but it was the first one there
that got the gun.
You. too. may put me to wort
by asking me to sell ai terrila neoua
Head artleles that you no termer
MEd. I am an Otkhoata and
Times Want Ad. Reach me by
eatoW 3-1211 fur Want Adeem?
■ *»
ALLIED HEADQUARTERS Bl
WORTH APH3CA. Jan. ia
tank and Mtotry forms “iittat
hw* sws nmM tvtoe
Vilhjataier Stefaressu
; i Famed Arctic
I Visitor Feels
i^This Cold, Too
J
J A man who Is downright phil-
Evening except Sunday
Gas Curtailed
unite took part.
of two Japanese po*l-
"“T “J* at* - •*•**«- - —— rtm. eat -te, ante ta. m. <
terThah AnyOther Evening Newspaper Published la Oklahoma
BROADWAY, OKLAHOMA CITY. TUESDAY?
First Witness
For Schwoerke
Changes Story
State Rests After
Police Tell of Tire
Delivery at Night
Charles Schwoerke went
on the witness stand in his
own behalf Tuesday after-
noon in his district court
trial on a charge of receiv-
ing stolen property. <
Charles Schwoerke. labor
attorney and former state
legislator, was making a
strenuous effort Tuesday to
prove he did not know the
tires he purchased had been
stolen in Lawton.
Sam Love, the man who ar-
ranged the sale between
Schwoerke and the three bur-
glars who have appeared as
witnesses against the attorney,
was on the witness stand at
noon and his testimony brought I
the first flare-up of the trial.
WIUmm Denies Depositioa
Love, who wm arrested Saturday
and who was released Sunday on bond I
provided by Herbert K. Hyde, attorney
for Schwoerke, wm faced with a depo-
•ition he gave Hyde in which to stated
that he wm told the tires involved
in the deal came from Houston.
In the deposition. to said to was
told by OUte Penny. Floyd Parrish
and hie brother, Bob Love, who stole
Um Urea, that Bob Love bad worked
for a filling statton man in Houston
and tod taken the tires in lieu of pay.
On cross-examination by George
Miskovsky. county attorney. Love de-
nted Ulla story and told bow ttw throe
boys. *11 11 yean old st the tune of
Um Uro sale, had stopped him on
Reno avenue and asked him if tel
captured at^GsnsnaiS^r*!
put: remnants of enemy army
enveloped in three email poek-
•to. (Thio page.) Alltod bomb-
ers continue attacks <m Sur-
ma. (Pago A)
AFRICA — British eighth army
within M miles at Tripoli, with
indications Rommel will aban-
don Tripolttania and try to
Join other axis forces in Tn-
War Today
In Brief
y
;s
< (
* (
■■ON, who concluded a
• tour by addressing the
Knife and Fork chib Mon-
t w hearting back cast to
*k with his research insti- •
Jtonds out Arctic informs- t
4* army, navy and Pan- •
•toraya,
• weather hers tea nothing 12
I f
' A - <
t
■OCBLY T
j
a- -
Cord
Flynn Yacht
Story Is Due
Dancer to Appear
On Stand Today
LOd ANOKLBB. Jan.
Peggy La Rue OaUarlee. Hollywood
entertainer, tells Tuesday of ter
week-end cruise in August. 1M1.
aboard frrol Flynn's palatial yacht
airocco. during which, the state
chargee, Um actor twice seduced her
The IS-ywsr-old Peggy ill] be
among the test of the witnesses the
prosecution brings to the stand tn its
effort to convict Um film star on thro*
counts of technical rape.
The proaecwUon phase of Ute tear-
tag neared an end after a state de-
mand for a mistrial wm dropped
Monday by agreement of opposing
eounseL
Prolonged arguments in Um cham-
bers of Superior Judge Leslie X Still
ended with a sttpulauon by the actor's
attorneys that one of two women
jurors accused by the state of express-
ing their attitudes toward the defend-
ant should be replaced by an alter-
nate Juror.
The juror excused was Miss Baine
Forbes, secretary to a radio network
executive. Three women members of
Um Jury panel declared she ted ex-
preeeed a determination to get on the
Flynn Jury. Two of them asserted
Miss Fortes declared tar purpose to
1 acquit the defendant: the thin!
3 charged sta tad said she would ctm-
J rict him.
3 i Her place to the jury box wm taken
• by Mrs. Alice P. Chalfant, a housewife
? and one of Um two alternate jurors
• who ted tatetMd to the evidence pre-
’ivtotttly introduced.
that B-M Liberators at
ninth U 8. army air fon
caUber bombs WWW* X
nssr Um tome st Kbm
I
Town of Nine Lives
Thia eat—and It isn’t a Maltese
—U totally unconcemad about
his other eight lives as he
to the west
-----------— Montgomery’s most advanced column was operating
point and Sanananda village inland, and a communique aaid it had driven axia fortaa
from Veni Ulid and was in contact with the enemy toward
Tarhuna, which ia only 40 miles southeast <rf Tripoli. Tai*
huna is some 60 miles beyond Beni Ulid where the axia suf-
fered heavily in a tank battle with the British
. The second British column sped along the coastal road,
passing through MisuraU and Garibaldi and reaching ths
Zliten area 90 miles east of Tripoli, the last stronghold at
Premier Mussolini’s ons-time African empire.
------ Tripoli Itself wm under Inevy
------------— ■ air attack.
Police Tuesday were looking
for a man they believe would
shake hands with Hitler and
hold Tojo on his lap.
Clyde Anderson and Jos Jerkins,
police detectives, tagged him Monday
at tte J. A. Sullivan residence, 1941
Northwest Forty-first street, after
Mr*. Sullivan discovered their dog
bouse on fire.
One black and tan hound puppy wm
found burned to death inside tte dog
bouM and two otters were found
almost frosen.
The dog house anon. Sullivan told
polios, WM the third attempt to kill
his dogs.
Sullivan aaid some time ago the
mother dog wm let out for a run and
returned to die a few minutes later.
Then his prise squirrel dog. *ith
more than 200 treed squirrel's to his
credit, returned with one toe shot off
after slipping out of tte yard.
The Sullivan, took their two re-
maining pupa in the bouse Monday
night.
Police, meantime, are trying to find
the dog-hater, hoping he wont set
flrt to an orphans borne or burn
down a teepitaL
Switch Trouble Cuts
Grand River Power
LITTLI ROCK. Art.. Jan. 1I.-44*)
—Southwest power pool executives an-
nounced trouble developed Tuesday at
subrtaUon of Orand river dam in
Oklahoma and ths pool, for tte sec-
ond time in a month, handled the full
burden of supplying ensrgy for.tte
government’s ahuntaum plant atJteke
Catherine. Ark. Service waa inter-
rupted from »:40 ton a. .
Frank M. Wilkes, president of
Southwest Oas and
parentty the entire Grand river dam
System wm out of service for ~M
time but that at »:•» a. st. it started
feeding about 20.000_
Oklahoma Oas and Bectric 1facilities
^^VTSreddSu**
The Weather
nrultOM*-CeMae aeteb
MBtiaxrS .MS te e-rtkwert
,vg | owphlcal about Oklahoma City’i
lo, . cold wave in particular and any
he 1 oM cold wave in general, re-
»rk I fined to smirk at the shivering
' acur-
their hot
JANUARY U, IM, riNM HONK EgnOH MUCX FIVE CENTS'
British Drive 50 Miles ;
_______ • *. > _■ ,illl
From Tripoli; Rommel
Pinched by Two Column
Service Shut Down Voluntarily to Boost
Pressure in Homes, Hospitals; Mercury To
Dip to Zero Range Again Tonight
Sub-aero weather sweeping over Oklahoma anw
“"T “2 ^,0’ ta oUahom‘cltT’ brou«ht * <^>
sure here early Tueaday that necessitated voluntary
«® industrial pUnu, Un^e, Zff JJZ
«>«««* «« preference to home*. Khoob and hoapltab
Thomaa H. Sterling^ligtricl manager of the Oklahoma Natural
Gas Co, said he notified managers of all large industrial olanta
and Entering establishments Monday afternoon to te pre^S
S jX°inv tem^at°ures U^ * thelr he*Ung plants bemuse
of dropping temperatures. The majority of firms called upon com-
' J plied, he said.
I As Tueaday morning’s peak began
Ito wane. Sterling aaid that by 10 a. m.
all industrial planta had been restored
to service. Actually, he aaid, the com-
pany registered more gM preeaure
Tuesday morning than Monday, in
■pit* of th* fact that tte majority of
larie bulldinp downtown are not kept
heated over the weekend and require
an extra supply on Monday.
Keep the Firm Bundag
Sterling said ta hoped it will not
be neceaeary to shut theae customers
<*i again Tuesday night, explain
that it depends on how low the mer-
cury drops and the demands of do-
mestic enm—wnara
"Although the gas prawure isn’t
normal X believe we can manage to
auppiy everyone tonight,” be aaid.
(Naiiewal WBelter Bwvtew F**e I
Industrial plaato fleet to ebwt eft
thelrgM---'... 1
stored to
otter fuel eoureea'euch~M oil and ooaL
•terUng Mid that residential ooa-
I
I
4
i
. •
(
I
“ I
1
I
I
I
Irt* ‘
z I
ies I
ng j
-I
ta- ’
I-
TS’
f
ew i
m. i
eir { j
n<
ret,
he
Monday.
The allied occupation of the
! coastal end of the Japanese-
held Papuan corridor left the
i remnants of Lieut. Gon. Tomi-
toro HorU’i northeastern New
Guinea army enveiopod by Aua-
trallan and American inf an try -
I men in throe restricted pockets
lyini from t half to two miles
inland from Um coast. AU three
art located along the main trail
Flee Varta tte apaaoto
flte Aueteahaa capture eg Baaaaaa-
da point and tta adjaiawi vntage at
neon Monday slims aad a ssrisa st as-
ordtoatod suacking aioTammla to
wh ich two Amsrieaa sad three Am-
tratea inf a *
Later tta ____________
tens was announced officially at a
oeetal pram armfarea,, ealaO aS
headquarter.
In renitonaittBU of the unaartn
aetkm wbleh started Sunday. Jarnwy
-T-wT:
rteaaed af Japs Tueaday wttk tte eap-
tare af aeaaaieSs point ata vStage.
IV. Sanaaanda villaoa ata Sanananda
point were captured Monday, and dur
forward elements reacted Girumd,**
tta announcement aaid.
"On the coast the an assy is restrict-
ed ta a small pocket SOO yards north-
west of the motor feed terminal tn
the area between Qirawa ata Tbrete-
na. Inland, two tammy part eta are
under attack.**
Laat Jap Otrew Rato*
Sanananda point, lying between pew-
riousiy captured Oona ata Buna,
Only ta, btadto., a ourtom Jto ta. ■’‘y—-1 ■
— - jxxrn in non nee atorn lacv owbm<.
With tt gone, there appeared Uttje
likelihood the enemy eouM hold out
ta strength, ata action against the
three pockets of trapped fbrom
took on the character of a 1
operation.
Associated Frets Correapoaadent
Yarn Haugland reported from New
I natives Tuesday as they
fled around with their
I bricks.
| On tte contrary. Vilhjalmur
’ wK/t IrOk^aeeew m leta MAM
o ! S*** amTecl in* our framing midst
I F* M time «to give us a new out-
" j £4.00 somebody’s winter that Mr.
wJhl*ren tea foisted on these parts.
i _,?ou teve to have the right mental
ytorde." aaid Stefansaon, Arctic ex-
| Norar, author, and one-time Harvard
• Itbei I ___
Mali IM 1U ClM
Ke ttan told how hw hod contacted
tehwoerse and arranged the teal.
The state rested its cam after po-
lice offtoera who conducted the tavee-
Ugaten that led to 8chwoerfce*a ar-
rest Mat April, toetiftod bow tte in-
vestigation of filling atation burglaries
tejvhad ted to discovery that
tehwoerfc* tad purctaeed tte tiros, - -
atoien in Lawton. The officers mid | «iuato in a Malta street piled
eoofr«“*l hl<h rubble from ___
^d, T‘"nrFor the whoie
another mas. island fortress is proving it bee
Mlskovaky wm stressing tta youth more llves th*n * cat. Another
of the three boys who took tta tires I Malta picture, page 10. (Wlre-
to Bchwoerke's home between 11 p. m. photo 1
and midnight and left them on the '
living room floor after ta had turned
Off tta porch light.
Irwerenee ef Theft Ort—-
Schwoerke’a defense wm going to
rely on a contention that while he
might teve violated tte national tire
rationing act. he did not know tte
tires were stolen.
Tta state sought to convince tta
jury that a reasonable man would have
reeotateod something wm wrong when
three 16-year-okl boys had four brand
new tires to dispose of at a time when
*11 tires were froaen.
Among tta character witneeaec en-
pearing for Schwoerke were J. B. Dud-
ley. attorney; Bd Hahn, claim superin-
tendent for an insurance company; 8.
C.. Nelson, claim manager for the cas-
ualty company, and Gordon totes,
^jaim adjuster for an insurance con-
nearer the aoost. There they were
halted by enemy ■wchtoegua aaeu.
Aoaataa Crem Bwampa
Mean while a seeeta Amtrabaa to-
fentry unit wMoh earliar hta captured
Cape Klherten a mils ata a half wert
of tanenatae. drove southeast aieag
tta stare to wttbto a aalla ef Sanaa-
and*, village before being held up by
a strong enemy parittm.
The third Australian force struck
boldly across swamps asperating the
RSrt
" I Jap Positions
At Sanananda
Are Captured
Mop-up of Three
Pockets Under Way
In Papua Area
Two-Day Deadline
“Therefore, m commander-tn-chlef
of tta armed forces, I direct *11 mine*
I tn tta Anthracite coal fields who are
I now out on strike to return at once
to their Job of producing vitally
needed coal for their country. If thia
la not complied with tn 4S hours, your
I government win take tta necessary
steps to protect tta security of tta
: nation against a strike which is doing
serious Injury to the war effort "
The 20-d*y-oid strike in the Penn-
sylvania hard ©o*l fields has involved
members of some 23 local unions head.
They have been demanding a *3 a Oa)
day wage ineraaae and cancellation
of a M-eenta a month increase in after Cox
union duet from ll .oo.
•j-5
I
Tiny Fort Outside Leningrad
his extradition hta been rsfuseil M Holds Nazis OH for 16 Months
-----
MOSCOW. Jan. IS—<VF>—A ttay
Raaaton garrison, under a hruasmat
of artillery, teM out to ■ a riant
8ehhieselburg fortress, outatde tte etty
proper, during an 1* montho ef tte
atafe ef Leningrad tte fxst apactei
theft"rf SMS rattmtag'tetea. *** **
loos of gasoline, from a west side
Communications Unit
Called ‘Nest of Rats’
WASHINGTON. Jan. IS.—0F>—Tta
house Tueaday ordered an investiga-
tion of tte federal communications
rommisaion by a special committee
wded by Representative Cm
The action
--------author of tte resolution re-
PCC Chairman Jamas L. Fly of being
wo™t ^L* toireaucrat’’ and had
mid tta entire FCC set-up ia “tta
P****Aa^* — - -a __-a. « .
thia entire country.
-fW .M •»— .___I-
town who have aought to
C---- **-*----- —
mid.
Peyrouton Named New
Governor of Algiers
ALGIXR8 Jan. IS —(UP) —Marcel
Feyrouton. former French minister of
Interior, wm appointed governor gen-
"*1 of Algiers Tuesday.
Peyrouton succeeds Yvea Ctate! to
rovernor general.
Peyrouton recently wm French am-
heemdor to Argentina. He eame tare
from South America by plane tort
week.
Koetenrakov
•:M a a. tenemry M.
Tta femime Bed army gum «««
I tona“*"d wheat to wheel and row open
Lieut. Pavel Koehanewtev earn-'row m ttay hta been at WahiMiad.
mended tte garriaoa which took a0 at V’lrcnirti ata to tte Caucaans.
tta Germans could give ata survtvad For two hours ata 3* mlnutae the
(It wm itateoted tte fortrem wm guns buried their tens ef stalk at toe
tte one which Peter Jte Great bwBt, German pootuon. tte great -» —
on a little iatota faring Schtamstouig Adotf Hitler hta believed totag.
te took tta town from tte. ontoe. M—« - ma
Tte Fortrem wm At tta end tte guns hta w —,
______*-----* — Wide *- »*“ - —-----2^ *
tab brettar waa tamped thwe th* infantry charged ta to widen tte
weak wtato Mecktatai ,M»ii|i»ttag I yap* M
who la
-----1 so.
hM offered only a two*
tag for another two years.
It is understood that Ike Hall,
ager of tta Perrine building
turned down tte federal
Tta requirement* of
The°agency^w^^Jd bulldln< over *•
ings. for instance theslaa’of the Com^
meree toctangs building or tta Brnn-
iff building
I^®*> »»re warned that if
focal building managers do not offer
a contract voluntarily, tta govern-
ment can sties the required oftics
•Pmo and move tta tenants out.
Milk Theft Suspect
Fights Extradition
LOd ANOKLM, Jan 13 -oT-Hd-
ward A. Shier, who told police be wm
sentenced to a North Carolina chain
gang for Mealing a bottle of milk. bM
announced te win ask Oov Karl War-
ton to refuse his extradition as a
fugitive.
Shier wm arrested Monday after
ftngerprintt taken at a rtiipyard.
where te sought a defense Job. had
teen traced, aaid D. H. Sprlmm ata
Frank Bradley, police inspectors. Ttay
reported Shier aleo told them he wm
arrested cnee before, in Chicago, but
tta governor of niinota.
Theft of Gasoline
Books Is Probed
CHICAGO, Jan, it (P) Frdtae BBd
federal agents Tuesday twvsattgeti it
r “---- - - _ - -___
aenttag appernimstriy 1JMAM gal.
Ions at toaobD^ from a west sSde
rationing board office.
Michael p. Mulcahy. Chicago area
director of tte OP A said mvestigattou
dwekwed that thieves kicked to tte
glam door of tte office and tote tta
books from a aafe. He aaM all gees .
line aerriee stations to tte erty were
hotiftod ef tte aerial munbess ef tte
atoien books and were raqnwtod to
be an tte alert te usara.
s^rtiTi^^ J?* • *
■pectai thpairt,, km how tte
y nwdar OsL Gen. H. M. Yoro-
_ ____________.> Stef-
tsamn, who knows a tot more about
■ro than a ppnguin does about ice
— —- . »
to time toe give us a new out-
taa foisted on them part*
totoude," aaid Stefansaon. Arctic
•nthropology Instructor.
' 'TH® eonaolixig thought came when
' *,ruddy-faced explorer stood
I 4***— outside tte Huckina hotel and
1 •■totUU that, -I feel tta cold juat
I ** N^ch aa you do."
a acuule of cobs for tta old
turner and another scuttle full
• total attitude ain't enough?” ta
aJ4T4po*, ■tofanaeon, with tta
■W Naoto tagging at hia mane of
t_tour. launched upon a cold
*■» discourse that baa its found-
*4 ** North Dakota’s M-below
. it* maturing in tta Aro-
F ^^14jSd Wish mini HiIot.
. uj44 » •Ma colder than 40 be-
, UssiA. “it makes litti* dlffer-
| ST 4" ^OY cold it get*. Dress for
, S.?*!.*001 worry about it—tta
| ■■■ wont give you a cold."
| **»» the correct endocrine
■■—» or excessive thyroid, you're
I jy. •• * bug in a nig. te added,
i m?1—,**800014 for tta Polar Boar
1 «^4. wh°— members frolic across
ying like
Michigan
City can meet tte sperifiretin— *nd
provide the 100.004 feet of floor apace
required for housing a federal agency
W“hlnK“n- U *P-
thr®e the Per-
rine building, tte Ramsey Tower now
tta Apeo building, and tte First Na-
tional bank building.
Tta federal agency, yet unnamed, ts -----------r
to be moved aa a part of tta decen- tte^prvvlous day had forced ttatr way
fl*INatloc of government bureaux
decentralisauon bureau, but who is
‘tomribed m a “big Deltas real es-
tate man. bM offered only a two-
year learn with an option for renew-
tag for another two yean.
man-
taa
came on a voice vote mw leoerai proposition.
-------------- .twuwI1 Th* requirements of the federal
the investigation, had accused ’?? .T*1 by turnln«
^htoiFWUtam Jfakteamsa Y toto— O* tDt htllldtflB AVMP tta to
’the worat . . , bureaucrat" and had
L- **"" —— . ....
nastieat nest of rsts to be”found ta
thia entire country.
"Of all the bureaucrats that are ta
town who have sought to ameer cen-
tre**. thia man Fly ia tta worst,” Cm
tor tta Polar Dear
reel frames,
“1
c*a do that without
\• super-abundance of
Anyone who really enjoys a
^4?^ 1,111 understand what I
, ??4* ta snow te easier than
to^eoid water or taking a
■R WM ta Alaska in 1840
— «®*>Ung himself that tta
™ Kbta are freexing to death
“ ■* inexperienced with cold
, _ _ “ ________:j
| .•* • is here today. A good
d . that it te raining on
1 Stem ■aterertth * temperature of
a
>t
Um ntort be^te oHMrAm
Mrtoimi. 13 rnteo aaath tf
AJited Ml arm, tars m teorib j
thaT'r^tag fTDnrteMTata ‘ 7tti
________GtotalBastfto from tte weal Ma
nlala: Tripoli harbor bombed toeptag the Mg axto bam ante
by Americans; axis tanks and--
in/antry repolssd an osntral
Tunisian front. (TMs pa«)
RUSSIA — Soviet troops widen
f’SnhT**’ llfUn<
offensives pushed alone entire
IJOS-mlle front (Pa<e 4.)
NtoUhood the enemy eouM teM eqt U.S.SubsSink
Five Jap Ships
Frees Correspondent
Guinea that Australian troops which
►
Speed of Montgomery’s Advance Gives
Axis Only Few Remaining Hours to Set
Up Defense for Vital Libyan Gty
CAIRO, Jan. 19.—The British Elffhth army sp
ed into the home stretch of its drive across Libya Turn
with an advance which carried one of two attacking colu
to within 50 miles or lees of Tripoli—closer than Mar
Rommel came to Alexandria last summer.
With Gen. Sir Bernard L. Montgomery pressing h
ALLIED HEADQUAR- check on»i*«rht for an attempted stand, or to quit
TERS IN AUSTRALIA, Jan. • withdrawal toward the Tuniaian border 100 b
19.—(/P>—Allied ground
forces captured Sanananda
Roosevelt Sets 48-
Hour Deadline
WASHINGTON, Jan. It.—CT>—
President Roosevelt, as com-
mander-ln-chief of the armed
forces. Tuesday directed all
atriklne anthracite coal miners
to to back to work at one*.
Ha aaM th*» tf they fall to comply
With Ms directive ta 41 hours, tta
government would take tte nsesmary
stops to protoct ths security of tta
natkm against a striks which comet
at a ttam of a abortage of fuel ta
war tune.
—---- __ -----------. •cum I.0S0 striking miners returned
ooid due ta tte rswulnlu of tte state Uwlr **• ■ Pknneylvnnla’a aa-
**“ • “ thracite field Tueeday ta tta largest
baek-to-work movement sine* tte
wildcat walkout began three weeks
ego. However, about 13,350 still re-
, mained Mie. .
Orders Are Wired
The chief executive issued his order
| ta telegrams to officials of the United
Mine Workers of Americe, national
and local.
Tta national union tea emphaaiaed
tte strike te unauthorised.
Tte telegram said :
"tta Friday. Jan. II. 1M3. tta na
r*ctire order calling upon ail miners
on strike in tte anthracite coal field
to return to work immediately. I have
been informed that several thousand
nn' th* retoers refused to obey tte order of
d * Tuta*.J_b??ow W* with by all employers and all em-
Clty 3 below sero. Unofficial reports ptoyee.
gave Woodward • below, Guthrie IS
below and Lawton 1 above.
In general, tta southern half of tta
state wm slightly above wro. Ard-
more reporting 3 degrees above and
McAlester 1 degree above.
High temperatures ta tta state
TcopyrtshU IMA by tew Y*rt Ttawsi
BUENOS AIRES. Argentina. Jan.
IS.—Tte ttermenaeter rose te 1*43
degrees Fahrenheit at 3 p. m.
Thia wm the highest temyeratare
rogtetered stnee ISM. when, eu
Janaary 31, It wm a half-degree
h-t—A--- lW»K-» 5---------
mIqBSs* TDv Btow BwiBlSlwyg swOwwvwF,
■MMte tlM IMS! B5Ct bBBFBbto tMftB
it had been Si yrevtens days.
M A VwWJbmteBB. BtoBRBfBiM ftf
senstreke were reported all over the
Monday ranged frost 3 degrees above
at Warooka to 35 above al Ardmore.
Wshlgren indicated Tueedey’a highs
would not vary much from those
figures.
Tta widest weather on record tor
Cold
’, and tta last to be ro-
te. wore those having
•torling Mid ttat rosidential cm-
remora would And it more eoonomteal
we to tot tta temperature In Ihelr
MSMO drop below 53 degrsse during
tte nigbt, indioattag tbat te expects
«U myu" * tire
OsMer Weather Fere it st
Colder weether wm forecast by
Harry Wahlgrea for tte reuttern and
owtorn sections of the stoto Tuesday
and Tueeday night, with continued I
At Tulsa the death of Julius Hussy,
04 years old. wm attributed directly to
r.Mta weather. He was found froaen |
i to death in his home.
No precipitation waa forecast for
the state Tuesday, indication that tta
worst of tta storm tea passed.
Wahlgren predicted tta temperature
■SdmSS t below j
ly warmer” wmttar would abate bitter
cold somewhat before noon.
Oklahoma City’s low temperature
low aero atVa^m.^Coktart January*!* latar heeod issued a dl-
on record tare, Wahlgren aaid, waa 11 --------
below ta 1302.
Four Betow ta TbIm
Guymon’s Id degrees betow
i4
If ~ —iw
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 53, No. 207, Ed. 1 Tuesday, January 19, 1943, newspaper, January 19, 1943; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1760048/m1/1/?q=War+of+the+Rebellion.: accessed July 4, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.