Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 54, No. 266, Ed. 1 Monday, March 27, 1944 Page: 4 of 16
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4
Oklahoma City times ’
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Powder MUI Explode.
Vte-
-- RELIEF-' PILES
Arms Plant Man Taken
On Draft Dodge Charge
KAN8A8 CITY, Mo March 27.-
u can ne mace avsuaoie.
lyor Hefner. Others probably
listed as desirable poat-war
Women Who
Suffer
from SIMPLE
collections
about 20
■■
•• ■
*foyw »fc»aa7nmSiS
m3 -master's a»aey Udi —......
Monday in a
destruction
civilian life
air. and _______________
te make a bettteground of Rrae.
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*>*•• tf**. —? *T*fk ****
Suck. wdfMM rdiaf.
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—
Supplied and Fed
TOLL 1», BOUGAINVILLE. Solo-
mon Islands. March 34 — (Delayed.)
—0T>—Japanese on this island aro j
not starving. nor aro they Ul-ctothod. ,
poorly equipped or running out at <
ammunition '
Every enemy soldier killed t 1
suicidal pro-dawn attack on Hill — . .
command post Friday morning showed ,
evidence of excellent physical condi-
tion. All were well-clothed in excel-
lent though soiled gYeen khaki: their *?r
laggings wars new. their nearly-new
hobnailed shoes were sturdy - -- — - —--
Hearty every one was well armed « most vital to
One U. 8. soldier said a high per- progressive growth of the
eentage seemed to have machineguns ' Panning means l
AU had more than ample supplies o< to me than merely landscaping,
cartridges for their rifles. *’• ---
Many had hand grenades. One
Japanese had a doaen sticks of dyna-
mite tied to his chest, presumably for
throwing into the command poet. AH
carried new gasmsske and each had
• shovel ter ten-hole digging.
the recommends* foUow" Pubhah«<1
itnear here Mon. sseocuuoi^ thr^hou^the1 country*
k*ton- W for tt provides s means at financing
a small building large projects which can be completed
Lemon Juice Recipe
£ S Checks Rheumatic
Pain Quickly
If ros setter frees rtnewstu. arthrttu
or ovaritis seta, try this suaeie rnes-
psnslve boms reetse that thoesands art
oauis Oot a aaekasa or Re-Cx Csoskm. . ."•LT"’ ~
a two-wssk surely today Mu it with
a erort of water, sad the Jutes of 4
lemons If s N. trouble at all ano lood-tro
eioaaaat. Yau aesd only 3 tabisspoonfuu
two timso a day Often within 44 hour,
MMtlmoa ovormcbt saleteMI results are
obtaiasd. Jf ths asms ds set seiekly
teavs aad tf you do set fsol better, return
the surety aackases aad Ru-Cx wUl oom
roe ■•‘bias to try so it is sold by rest
droeeM so Hr as absolute aoe.y-wcx
recreates. Ru-Xr Comvoaad is tor sals
sad roeeaaended be drus stereo every-
where.—(Adv.>
jr, arrived In January Raulaton
1b in Pearl Harbor In the infan-
try. The baby and his mother
are living with Mra Raulston t
Mater, Mrs. E. D. Storey, at
Granite for the duration and
h^lssNhilsdlwnR^
T'MMMI'WIM!
You girls who suffer from simple ss-
WdiaUM?> ySiUteridS^
weak, dragged out**—due to low btotel
.***•“ ° dirocted—PUUkaml Tab-
' If* PWtaa’t mmms
recently told council members.
Past policies of the Research In-
stitute. voluntary tax-swing oragm-
sation whose membership is composed
principally at business building and
apartment bouse owners, have recom-
mended ths bond issue route to fin-
ance large construction ventures in-
stead of the general fund route of
- building by piecemeal over a number
FAIRCHANCE, Fa. March ffl.-OF of years.
ro —- This policy follows the
as s unit, but spread* tax
for them over a period of
years.
Meantime the city council faces the
iov ■ Proto**ra of knowing how extensive the
to nro- Pr*u,r*r program will be. so arrange-
has not yet been in- ready to be submitted
y to whatever government agency will
have charge of materials and federal
aid after the war.
JjL Australian Catholic
_____ !e Bishops Decry Bombs
• recent experiment with MELBOURNE. March 37—CTv—All
Teen-Town organisations at four city Catholic bishops of Australia joined
*““*—•—- statement protesting the
of historic cities and
---— ta war. especially from
the air. and calling on the belligerents
not to make a battleground of Rome.
The statement was addressed —
lord Oowrie. governor general
Australia, the prime ministers <*
British dominions and leaden L.
United States, Russia, Germany and
Japan.
Osweps estimated at 030.000
And Thu I. ‘What’
“Oh. boy! Whoopie' Goodie! aten_
We tot what we waited.” Pvt
x ~ ™—
----------------------
Mayor Hefner Others probably
projects to provide needed improve- Natives Improvise Stretcher for Wounded
^^i^stnd'msX-Zd^aXor^n' A native of the Buthidaun«-MaunKdaw area in Burma, wounded
Other projects considered as "must" shrapnel, is transported to a first aid station by two natives
_ in the city councils past considers- on a chair stretcher suspended from a pole. A cover protects the
were visiting in Oklahoma City tJon problem is a new fire st<- wounded man from the sun. * Wirephoto.)
when the picture was taken, won in the rapidly expanding north-
Raulston is the son of Mrs. Etta west part of the city
Raulston, also of Willow. Fart Prvjaeu Talked
. ■ ■ ■ ■■■ ■ Coupled with this has been recent
e talk of salvaging the materials in the
Boueainvule oW rtt* hu^ng at Grand and
wakguasai/saag; Broadway, both to clear the lot there
Japs Well Armed, vide °bn7k w*th^Shuh” ne^ f
»• j j w-i j tions may be t
ever, this has 1
venation, and has oot yet been in-
cluded in any plan
Recently council members have
given unofficial attention to possibil-
ity of an integrated park and r*“
ground system by which school fa-
ciliues as well as city parks might be
used. This sentiment among counci 1-
... men has been strengthened by the
-Jfr school boards recent experiment --‘.2:
~ Teen-Town 2*
highschools
Aurand's position has been in fa-
1 — of preceding the actual compieuon
post-war plans with a thorough
survey at the city to determine what
nroiftrta xrw vltAl tz> steady.
j*j naive gruwwi oi me City.
City planning means a lot more
Post-War City
Projects Due
Study Tuesday
First steps of the rtty officials to
map a detailed post-war plan for city
development la scheduled Tuesday
when Mayor Hefner and C. F.
Aurand. city manager, begin Hating
needed projects to be considered for a
probable future bond issue or federal
aid program
At the top of the list will be the
etty’s aanitary and storm sewer con-
struction need, plans and specif lea-
Uons for which already have been
started. First unit of the general
sewer project still is pending in
Washington for approval of materials
and aid In rebuilding the dilapidated
main sanitary sewer serving Packing-
town and Capitol Hill.
Mew Fire flatten U 'Most*
Along with the sewer program, a
study of what will be required to ex-
"ROd sewage disposal plant facilities
—o will be made
"There are some construction proj-
ect*. including our sewage situation
J British Troops
I Cut Rails Back
I Of Burma Japs
NEW DELHI March TT—(UF>—
I Maj Gen. O. C. Wingate's airborne
I British commandos who reportedly
M have eut the Myttkytna-Mandalay
■ ' railroad tn north central Burma
■■ from threatened supply lines of Japa-
M ' neae farces which crossed the border
B I into India.
'8 | Announcement that Wingate was
bte leading the commando force landed
■| ter behind the gn—y lines by Amerl-
' can transport planes and gliders eom-
| . I manded by Col. Philip O Cochran was
M the first indication of the type of
I J £££*” whlch Japanese can ex-
" / The bearded, round-shouldered mas-
ter jungle commando, who ted British
and Indian troops which harassed
• 10 008 square miles of enemy-held
territory between February and April.
1M2. said the new operations would
i be baaed on the experience of those
I raJda
•Wing aad Beard' Jala
Wingst* and Cochran—a combina-
tion known popularly as “ths wing
and the beard'—made one of the
most daring military operations in
history in establishing deep in Japa-
nese territory air and land bases
i from which long-gynge penetration
columna are operating against enemy
comm un tea items
Severing of the Myitkyina-Manda-
lay railroad would cut off supplies in-
tended for the Japanese 18th army,
already hard pressed in the Mogaung
valley by rh tease and American
forces, as well as threaten communi-
cations of the three-pronged enemv
attacked aimed at Imphal, capital of
India's Manipur province.
Chinese Meve South
Lt Gen Joseph W Stilwell's head-
quarters reported that the main Chl-
1 (UP>—Indignau - of fsllcw workers neae army moving south from Jambu
[ over failure of a departmental chief Bum pass was within five mites of
i clerk at the Lake City Remington already taken by a flank-
I a™, punt u, ™pon lor udnetu. M
I to HU amu on elurn. of draft tn- tft. oilud troop. vMch vm "m^n-
»>on. federal bureau of investigation taming steady pressure” on them
agents reported Monday. Ghurka levies have advanced 33 miles
Dwight Brantley, head of the Kan- south from captured Bumprabum to
sax City FBI office, said other Rem- — * ------------------------
ington employee (* -nurred at rontlnu
mg to work with Kenneth R. Hilte-
I brand. 27. after they learned he nac
not reported for induction. His arrest
followed.
Members of his family described
Hiltebrand as a member of the Je-1
hovah’s Witneraec religious sect and
a conscientious objector.
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PHONE 3-6425
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BEFORE YOU PLAN THAT TRIP
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war •ffortl Do
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PKwne 3-6425
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700 .fort.1 Do
wh«n tnpiord.partuz. tun..
wU. trMfic i. Cdl hbn far hi, btim
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SANTA FE TRAILWAYS
UNION BUS STATION
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PLYMOUTH • DODGE
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tree te Mte» eroey IheMtey. ♦ 8. M. t W. T. roer CM MsSw^
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Mow Brahe LMtag...
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Yos may need things like these:
Boeeono of wartime reotnetMoa, mowy items « howte, Shmms
moulding*, bump^ terot moral body pert* hardware, tec, ore mt
being made today Yet replacements from stock assy still bo ovtelabio
for thorn dmnegml beyond repter.
rar youve got...
Mtnglntltr
Ploy safa! You can't afford to Wt your car deteriorate. Ifg wdae
to figure you may have to drive it another two or throe ywro
Thia is Sprint Tune-up Tinx Aak your Plymouth, Dodca,
De Soto or Chrysler dealer to chock your car’s engine, brahoa,
■tearing and lighting system.
Don’t wait till the last minute. Under the praasura of war*
time work, dealer.' shops aro often filled early in fhe day.
Why not phone and make an appointment for a time when
your dealer can give your car prompt and thorough attentioa?
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saying ths air-
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fa order to
far behind
Wage Increaae Refueed
WASHINOTON March rt.—U^—
An 8-oent hourly pay increase was
dented Monday to workers in the Fa-
dflc northwest foundry industry by M
the war labor board on the ground wln*Sia*’rolT ■
that it would “start a spiral which after waktas thw steteto
might wen disrupt the stabilised rate ££^■£7 -
structure" of the entire northwest.
IlliiMbi. Edue*
CARBONDALE. HL, j
—Roscm Balaam, <
Court martial proceedings were bo-
gun Monday at the naval air technical -
training center at Morman against
three sailors charged with having stol-
en meat from a locker at the south I
base on January >1. J
Wanted! Mea and1
Woman Who Are
Hard of Hearing I
__^t the stabllteed rate |
e< the entire northwest. "* ** ****
£**2* « mn- * Navy Trio Faces Trial
an? too£r%SS ^w^T*ratted On Stolen Meat Count
bolding their own.
A press note roles rod by Adm. Lord
Louis Mountha“—- *—------
guoted Wingate-- .
borne operetten broke precedent
landing troops "where the
not" tnsfsel of "where the
waiting and estahlishsd"
set rood aad refl blocks
his ’inea
—BmteKgTT!''- i 'i tij "TUBT
saaEEseesassssEBHE
K£g*L?!fl,, ■■L1.. ..J.
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 54, No. 266, Ed. 1 Monday, March 27, 1944, newspaper, March 27, 1944; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1760418/m1/4/: accessed July 3, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.