Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 55, No. 17, Ed. 1 Saturday, June 10, 1944 Page: 1 of 10
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‘ On Used Cars
area,”
the spokesman
si
A
ture from that country, the
c
f
4
ies
?
Administrator Chester Bowles aid.
The ceilings were fixed at different
levels for three brosd geoaraphical re-
gion*. Highest prices prevail in the
far west, lowest prices east of the
Mississippi river, and ceilings about
fl
January Prices Frozen
hi Surprise Ruling
WASHINGTON. June IO—''*’)
—The office of price adminis-
tration Saturday slapped price
I ceilings on all used passenger
cohsiderabie cars, whether sold by dealers or
Irwi-T.( Demwralived
The continued demoralisation
» gTsaslnn t-dly reduced forces was
'■•Ma large measure to the allied
* ■tokuighta. Mediterranean army
* foree fighter bombers Friday were
yptad officially with destroying 244
vehicles and 300 raU cars, dam-
Whg IM vehicles and 130 rail cars
■9 knocking out great numbers of
■■■drewn carta
^hhcrating on the catastrophe that
kefaiten the German armies tn .
ariteu» to pick up stragglers and de-
*kn from all manner of units."
^*<ag that the only orderly unit en- 1
P* the*2vth Luftwaffe*'field”division I
jWh waa aent hastily from Den-
•■to- Meanwhile inroads were made
* too (Millieii *ir force.
MAAF.Le* 13
®tob by more than MO heavy bomb-
’s r_ ___- .. ~
**g IS heavies.
tm building and barrack* at
Brim airdrome east of Munich.
*_*»<1 as the city's industrial area
*•0 yards and Upee toward Augsburg
I ^golstadt were also battered j
JU*v American heavies set fire to at
*** two oil tanks and damaged a
- '^■•ry at Porto Marghera. near
' alunun -un works was also
•Mtoy night RAF bombers blasted
Trieste refinery, which hi peace-
whs refined is percent at Italy's oil. |
the Swiss newspaper La
SaHse said in an article re-
ported Saturday by OWL
LONDON. June !•.—/Fu—
The German radio issued a
bulletin Saturday saying the
Swiss federal council in agree-
ment with the general staff
had ordered strengthening of
mihtarv preparations by the
ypWine up of additional mili-
tary classes in view of the
situation.
neeaUy taken include cooks, butch- which
Rm Old.
---- — — cents prices ror m»ir« um «wu>
m2 i?ernt*nD^Ooerinf I 6 000 models manufactured from 1937
T_* ^fengLh comparable with that for more than the comparable
1937 model.
The action came as a surprise, al-
though OPA has been working ac-
tively toward price control of used
cars for more than a year, in which
time the price level has soared 20
percent Ceilings were opposed by
spokesmen for dealers, who had lost
their revenue from new cars
“In some sections of the country,
used cars 3 years old bring today
lar cars brought before the war." OPA
forward to main-
statew
Two ceiling prices were set for each
__ -------------M “as is."
j the other a "warranty" price covering
of ears
; i_______
condition
of "the "as is” price every six months.
BULLETINS
LONDON. June H.—
German civilians in occupied
iwinu H* lliuan *a as — — Holland have been warned to
an Official spokesman said “we prppare for a speedy depar-
-----from that country, the
Dutch news agency Aneta said
Jritorired in the last few'days has Saturday.
NEW YORK. June lb-—m
—French patriot formations
have surrounded Grenoble in
Thirt. S MAA*tLT ~ shot southern France and the city
JWty-four enemy planes were shot . in B of ^e."
feW bv bvtrwm than MM) hMO bomb* ® __ w
«. The MAAF tost 23 planes, in- the Swiss newspaper La
BRkte" ctoudy”conditions the
Riem airdrome east of Munich.
3 Nazi Italy Ar
J In Disorderly Flight
Allies Move on to Take More Towns
As Kesselring, Mackensen Retreat
ROME. June 10.—(Jt^~The German 14th army fled northward
Sai.rday with increasing disorder, and the allied command for
the first time declared officially that a •‘catastrophe" has befallen
Field Marshal Albert Kesselring’s forces in Italy.
Slashing steadily northward after the retrerfting foe, the
Fifth army captured the ancient town of Tuscania. 13 miles north-
east of Tarquinia
Despite the great .speed of Lt. Gen. Mark W Clark s pursuing
troops, which have averaged roughly 15 miles daily since the fall
et Rome, an official spokesman declared they are "unable to
catch up with any important elements of Col. Gen. Eberhard von
Maekenaen a 14th army which is withdrawing in this area in a
uxanpletely diuerpanized fashion.”
Dri Bghth army also picked up4> —
WMri»U northward advance near
Mackenwna flight was considered I PlIlHO'C Pllt
11 peril to the Nan 10th army, whose VJVEA1-11Z20 a 111
■Sbdrawal northward on the east
tot of the Tiber has been slower and
■ore orderly, due largely to demoh-
uona. mine fields and the mountam-
«■ terrain which made close pursuit
Um British Eighth army difficult.
19th Endangered
“But of the Tiber river the Ger-
ton 10th army la robbed of the *up-
Rrt of its sister army and now has
J b provide, out of its own means.
■ jrutection against the threat
d ■Presentee by the allied advance to
] a* Viterbo
r ■<
J Mere. too. there is considerable cars> whether sold Dy aeuiers or
Rwrganisation noted and prisoners private owners, at the levels
■esntiy taken include cooks, butch- which prevailed in January,
■k bakers, some no more than 14 1944
’•Jf* 044 OPA set forth specific dollars-and-
. y0— m the 10th army continue „nU prlceg for 23 makes and about
■an and the Hermann Goering di- . 6 ()0() models manufactured from 1937
■■» m particular has been reduced through 1942. Older care may not be
W R Mrtnath Mwvtnavwhl* su4»H tbamt ! . . . ___ b.s___aW-__
which it straggled back from
Fifth Fans Out
With the taking of Tuscania, Tar-
Wtua and Ve trail a, the Fifth army
■* baa fanend out on a broad front
■•re than 50 miles to the northwest
*■■ Rome and at the same time has
W IUt»ec at least 40 miles north of the
coital city in a drive beyond Viterbo
*■ Bghth army captured Moricone.
M U Miles north of Tivoli and Arsoii, two or three times more than simi-
• ■■• wiles northwest of Subiaco. ----------
fl la the Adriatic sector Eighth army
Rl Ms movea steadily
I ** aontact with the withdrawing
advancing as much as five
• The battered towns of Orsogna
3 y Guardiagrele, as well aa Mig-
" J®*00 and FUetto, were occupied and halfway between for the remaining
River loro crossed. The German*
■ft Guardiagrele in flames, then ----- ,----
** ■■Usd the nil* to delay occupation model, one covering a car sold
__ 1 m •• ewm rrw ntv** rtrir* f
sold by dealers with the guaran-
tee that they are in good operating
condition
The ceilings will drop four percent
Rome Appears to Be Intact
In a three-star jeep. Lt. Gen. Mark Clark (left front). Fifth army
eommander, rides through a Rome street on June 5. the dav after
the city’s capture. In the rear seat are Maj. Gen Alfred M
Gnienther (left). Clark’s chief of staff, and Maj Gen Geoffrey
Keyes. Second corps commander. 8t Peter s cathedral is in the
background. (Wirephoto.) 1
LONDON, June lb. — —
Royal navy light coastal forces
early Saturday sank three
heavily-armed German traw-
lers off the Dutch coast and
damaged a fourth in another
of a series of sea clashes.
Americans Hit Again
At Plocsti Oil Plant
eiF i EKN 1H AIR FORCE HEAD-
QUARTERS Italy. June 10 — 3N—
Swarms of Amenean P-39 Lightnings
streaked arrow the Balkar.’ al tree-
top levels Saturday bombing and
strafing the Roma na-Americana ml
refinerv at PlneML^ast major refinery
left opersung tn Romania The tar-
, get was left euveioped io black smote
City May Escape
Heavy Rains Due"
In Rest of State
Fairly heavy rainfall, expected for
most parts of the state during the
next three days, will dodge Oklahoma
City, according to U S weather
bureau forecasts for local and state
points Saturday.
For the city, partly eloudy, with
little change in temperature, waa on
the menu for Saturday afternoon and
Bundsv. although south breezes were
scheduled to whip up to 25 or 3"
miles an hour Saturday afternoon and
night
Showers and occasional thunder-
storms in the west part of the state
were scheduled to start Saturday, and
extend over most of the rest of the
state Saturday afternoon and Sunday
Traffic Agency Gives
Commandeering Notice
WASHINGTON June 10—<UP> —
Defense "transportation director J
Mon me Johnson in what amounted to
a stay-at-home request to would-be
summer vacationists Saturday advised
the public that railroad and bus space
may be commandeered without notice
because of returning invasion casual-
ties.
It was the sternest warning given
thus far by the government to non-
essenual civilian travelers.
SUPREME HEADQUARTERS,
j Allied Expeditionary Force, June
10.—'/Pi—First attempts by Ger-
mafi naval craft to enter the In-
vasion coast area have been
frustrated by allied sea power,
it was disclosed Saturday in a
communique detailing three sur-
face actions, one of them a
point - blank engagement be-
tween eight allied and four Nazi
destroyers.
Eight British. Canadisn and Polish
destroyers intercepted the four Ger-
man destroyers off the tip of Bnttanv-.
near He D'Oueasant before dawn
I Friday.
Naxi Destr •ven Routed
The allies blew up one of the enemy
destroyers, chased another aground
in flames and scored hits on the other
two. which escaped, the communique
said
The grounded vessel was attacked
later by Royal Canadian Beaufighters
which shot at least 70 rocket propec -
tiles into it and scored numerous hits
with heavy and light bombs Saturday
it lay a smouldering wreck surrounded
by a pool of burning oil.
Damage and a few casualties on one
British ship, The Tartar, was the only
allied cost
The allied destroyers joined battle
on parallel courses with the Germans,
dodging a torpedo barrage.
During Thursday night an allied
destroyer force under Rear Admiral
Don Pardee Moon of the U. S. navy
intercepted and drove off a force of
heavily armed German light craft be-
tween the mainland and the isles De
St Marcouf. Just off the American
landing sone on the east side of the
Cherbourg peninsula.
Naxi E-BaaU Repulsed
Allied light coastal forces repulsed
German E-boaU that tried to enter
the invasion coast area both from the
east and west sides Two of the enemy
ships suffered hits.
Details were disclosed also of the
loss of a U. S. detroyer in the early
part of the invasion. (President
Roosevelt said Tuesday two American
destroyers and one landing craft bad
been lost up to noon of that day.)
A German inland battery scored
hits on the destroyer while its guns
were clearing a beach for landing of
ground forces The battery was
silenced, *d the destroyer swung
back to its assigned targets "when
something hit us." the commander re-
called.
The vessel went out of control pos-
sibly from a hit by some type of
rocket projectile. She stopped with
her engine rooms flooded, and orders
wvre given to abandon ship.
H
f R A N C E
0 1$
3
I
I
«
to 500 American Flying For- Bayeux. the allied announcement said. It waa the fourth
V?3
i
V n»d »v Let ■ee>et
Grille
east of Ixifny late Saturday gave the
the extensive flooded areas on which
The U.
making beach fortifications and putting up obstacles in possible
new
baa
I
1. bomb and shell hits.
lost eight bombers
White House announced Saturday.
F
•*
No onder the Japs Can't Take It, the ay Our Army Throws Hot I^ad.
4
.“4
'V
ktveui
Finns Report
Red Offensive
Nazis Say Soviets
Hit Karelian Hard
sources reported that an American armored column
driven to within 10 miles of the prize port of Char.
are giving an excellent account
tnaelvea fighting against strong
forces and superior enemy air
j*
D'j’t Harcuur- /
v 4
I
I Bombers Used
On Nazi Forts
Behind Front
0
500 Heavies Called
To Support Ground
Armv in France
Salid arrows indicate points on French invasion coast where allied troops
were reported attacking Saturday, and where the Nasi counter attack was
beaten off near Caen. Outlined large arrows indicate allied aim to isolate
Germans and capture hey port of Cherbourg (Hirephoto 1
LONDON. June 10 —0P1—A Finnish
communique, quoted by DNB in r
Berlin broadcast, said the Russians produced from hens kept underground
so as to hide them from the Germans
were being pressed on our troops
People in the villages we have lib-
erated are coming forward readily
' ’ :---------------•
- \ ’ >
IS Mart 1. 9
{••'
I: \
n
Roosevelt Signs Bill
Boosting Debt Limit
WASHINGTON. June 10— (UP) —
President Roosevelt has signed
7 - C
Nazis Admit Tank Column
Pierces Line Toward Port.
In Advances on AU Fronts
launched a general offensive support-
ed by heavy artillery barrages and
strong tank formations, on the Kare-
lian isthmus north of Leningrad Frt- and denouncing "lea eollaborateurs "
One of them thrust a list into my
hand today that contained the names
of 10 of the most prominent persons
tn the village. All of them, he said,
had made things easy for the boche
and for themselves
I handed the list to our intelligence
men.
♦landing fields.
'! Fortunately Rommel's defense pro-
gram was only half completed when
we landed.
The mayor of the village near Caen
who told me this with a twinkle
in his eye. “Some of us saw to it that
the British knew the state of the de-
fenbrs "
The French people are taking the
allies to their hearts and unearthing
all manner of wtoes. ciders and
liqueurs from dusty shelves Luscious
strawberries were handed to the more
• lucky men of our forces, while eggs
Ste. Mere-Eglise, Isigny and Formigny, as well as assisting
in the capture of Bayeux.
Advancing American patrols in the northern Cherbourg pe-
ninsula cut the Carentan-8te Mere-Egliae-Valognea road at a
iber of piacea, it was announced.
I.'tcry and 8te Croix had fallen earlier in the allied drives to
up their beachheads along a front of nearly SO mil*.
it the allies for the first time stnoo
French soil, with heavy transports
ng from two airhelda on ths penln-
town to be taken by the Americans who previously had taken
2L*. Mere-Eglise. Isigny and Formifny, as well as assisting
capture* Jap-held atolls in the far Pacific as the Eighth service command’s^ shooting demon*:rRrijm.
Attacks,” (
workers in war plants and essential industries obtaining----- - - j u ,u " l u 4. .
shows the terror of cannon fire and bomb blasts. The picture isn't wired for sound, but thoe^ who saw the show Fri-
day night probably can feel the ringing in their ears, even now.
By NOEL MONKS
WITH THE BRITISH PORCES BEFORE CAEN June 9 — 'De-
layed •—When German Field Marshal Erwin Rommel inspected
this sector of the Atlantic wall two months ago he remarked,
“This is just the ideal spot for an allied landing. It must be
strongly fortified immediately.”
Every ablebodied Frenchman and woman was conscripted into
.1 .. - - .....I
| on bewrbbewda al along Um from wd
' animated alltad atrengto at apwartto
_ _ ** rte—■< «rven StvMoM had bam
aonihUaied m Um aariy ngMtag..
I "riw tall of Imgny. xmettoB of ttw
Mid the rocket*' red dare and bombs bursting in air. Oklahoma City thousands rot a ringside view of now the army ><p~f
_________ e ....?• — ... “ W- I -1-______.kr^>*trv<r downn rat irtrt f Oklahoma City ^tf
opened Friday night in Taft <tadium. The show will go on tonight, Sunday and Monday nights, with lucky j roa**i roeuDunaenUoao and onnooB-
r tickets from their employers. This picture, made Friday night, I u* aiiwd bold on a vmi *w*
of tht bow-joined baartUwsda bet wo*
Carentan and Caen, the two pnadpal
I enemy trnnghni*
day
“The enemy in the early morning
hours of Friday started a general of-
fensive.” said the communique, as
quoted by the Germans
“The sttacks. which were launched
at various points, were frustrated ex-
cel* for some minor breaches of local
importance.
“The enemy suffered a considerable
number of fatal casualties Ten ene-
my tanks were destroyed Our fignt-
ers and anti-aircraft defense downed
24 enemy machines The battle is
still in full swing Reconnoitering ac-
tivity took place at other part* of our
land fronts ”
Rommel Picked Invasion Spot,
But His Defenses Weren't Ready
French Kept British Informed Of
Hurried Preparations Along Beaches
JA
LONDON. June 10—'UPl—Up
tresses and Liberators attacked
enemy airdromes in Brittany
and Normandy Saturday, a stra-
tegic air force communique an-
nounced.
A 1.000 plane fleet of Fortresses
Liberators. Mustangs Thunderbolt*
and Lightnings bombed and gunned
many airdromes in Brittany and Nor-
mandy. Nan strong pointe near the
battiefront, and target* of every
variety.
The daylight fleet of American
planes struck in the wake of perhaps
750 British heavy bombers which de-
fied night storm* to smash at the
most forward airdromes behind the
German lines, impeding a reported
Nazi attempt to reinforce its air
squadron* in the battle area.
J.5>9 Serttes ia IS Hears
Still fsr from ideal, the weather
eased enough to permit Americans to
return to Lhe battle area after 24
hours of almost total inactivity.
In the 12 hours up to noon the
allies had flown nearly 3.500 sorties
including the RAF night activity. I
dumping perhaps 5.000 tons of bombs
on German strong points.
One phase of the air battle shifted
to the sea where United States and
RAF bombers operating under ths
coastal command were flying cease-
less pstrols in search of U-boots re-
vealed to be threatening to attack the ini
eoi
I (
Within the fin* three days more
than 200 enemy tanks were destroyed |
and several thousand prisoners taken
Since June • two enemy cruisers. I
three det i’nyera, atx transport vessels
and tank landing vessels were sunk by
the Germany navy the luftwaffe and
J batteries of ths navy as well
I army command
te enemy heavy cruiser three ■
cruiser*, six destroyers, five mo-
ots eight transports and 14 spe-
The invading troops by clos-
ing the sluices against ths
strong channel tides, have al-
f»dy been able to clear some
small stretches of land to ths
j east of water which covers the
low-lying terrain up tp as much
M seven feet.
“W newspaper Bls*
_ 1 Wl
only 17 miles from Cherbourg. Mg pert
vital to the buildup of the invah*
foothold A later Storkhoini dtepot'h
quoted German sourees aa saying the
most edranced eohn* ef O. B. ar«
mor -evtdeotty that striking Mrih-
ward from captured Ms. Mero-^N*
-was 19 mites frous Cherbourg
Oenaa* WUMae
Henry OenaU UMM- Press eer-’
; respondent, reported tram Um rismi to
of Bls. ----ia S dispat*
written Thureday *at "We new are
up to virtually full strength to artfl-
lery. and the impact of the eombtasd
fire seems to have dampened the
spirits of the Osman gunners who up
to s few hours apo wore making tt
tough for the United Btatoo infantry •
He reported seeing German placards
tftet captured from MU udMo or*ri*
of Bayeux and Caen where “the possible steadT fast to"*s last m*.*
y after an embittered MruggW Mari reports eaM Um Americans aU
\ ---
/c-f:»O’w9G J
1' • yVwv5-‘'»b,--;
/ ‘/C
’$•0
; Eq’ v» \
num
[It was announced also
IMO were using air bases*
and American Spitfires ofl
The capture of Trevifl
allies another foothold WIUU4
the Germans had reMed to cover Carentan and tha approaches of
Nazis Say New
Landing Fails.
Allied Ships Claimed
Sunk in FifhUng and amp-smTumliSSM
LONDON, June 10.—<*)—
Fighting on the Normandy
bridgehead is “continually in-
creasing in intensity*’ and both
are throwing fresh forces
action," the German high
allied line* of eooununicaUoD to ths command \aid Saturday
<.uuuvcuuu landing attempt at Trwvffle.
Baek in Front Uns immediately south of the mouth ot
While ths RAP heavy bombers were Um Brins, "milspeed ia the fire ot
pounding four air field* in northern f nur eonatal betterire" with a war-
France- flier* only 30 miles south of »h»P "ink aad others forced to with-
the battle line before Caen; Rennes, drak the German communique aa-
1 Laval and Leman*—a force of Moe- sertisd.
quitoes struck st Berlin for the first
time since May 27 They dropped more
than 30 two-ton bombs in a lightning
attack.
About 500 Fortreases and Liberators
answered a call from the ground
forces for help against gun posniooe
and defended, areas near the north
coast of France
ryaftl ntMi ff—MM v
German gun position* were bombed deoioved “
by instrument through the cloud*, but
clearer weather was encountered over
some inland targets. Rail yard*, tracks. b
> highways, heavy gun positions. Obn-
I centretions of troops and tank* — "J1
German target* of vital importance to
the Normandy baule—were hit by the .
bombers over a belt from one to 15
miles behind the battle lines.
Besides hitting the German alr-
1 dromes, the RAF night bombers also
carried on im battle of communica-
tions. attacking the rail center of
Etampes. where three major north-
south and east-west lines Join 30
miles below Pari*. , a* tl
the The German air force struck at the C
bill increasing the national debt limit beachhead in some force, losing four othe
to 92W 000.000 000 and reducing the planes It did not put up aenoua re- tor I
cabaret tax from 30 to 20 percent Um sutance against trie RAF force, which rial landing vessel* were damaged by
nr___««_____ . 1 - -- *. .r rJai^ji yw*wv«K Mibm "*
ALLIED SUPREME HEADQUARTERS. Jone 10 —
(UP)—Allied forces advanced on all froat* on the Nonnaa
peninsula, it was officially announced Saturday, and Ger-
ma:
hac
bourg
American forces captured Trevieres, nine milee west ot
i
opping up operation* on ths
m bank at the Orne are making
progress Bnemv counterattacks
st Touffreville hare failed."
I rrenm unique declared
■ tank fighting went * ia the | the m* to “Maf the~Amm1emM
» after an embittered struggle
dad tn puahing back our rear tacked near Careatoa with akmrt tair
Uses behind which our reserves infantry dtvMa* * «no grmria*
division, at the aaaw tans dropptoa
the Cherbourg peninsula “am- paratroopers behind ths Hum on Unm.
d righting is in progress." ths The Oermaa fsnaiWias withdrew
unique mid adding that “<mr < to the north aad northwest, and ana.
------------- --------- 1{(<J out ta
ronuderebly shorter Ba*" a* Bar-
lin broadcast aaM
Mg* la Key Coater
American tanks end taf*try ma*
a dramatic juncUon wtth the BrlUoti
on their left flank w* of Bayvuz
while another tmeriena echo* to the '
northwest was bauh* Ms way at*f
the mam coastal highway frt* Ste.
Mere-*Uee toward Cherbearg. *
miles distant
Isigny lies half-way ike* Bay-
eux and Ste. Mero-WMe. es>d to the
junction of the coastal highway and
several secondary roads By aetring K.
the Americans Ughten* thetr stags
are around Carentaa. stx autos to
the west and the hiags at the Osr-
manr crumbling defeneea
Desptte Um steady allrid pal* hew.
ever. Oermaa rearitasMS was meuatta*
and Gen Dwight D. Aaenbewer ro-
■ ported ia ha ninth "iimiinl* eg ,
1 the invasion that ’eonUmsoue ngbt-
ing was raging M me* aeeten.
German panaers and tnfawtij
probed constantly Into the allied Itoea
The communiqus Mid British aad Ca-
nadian fortes an the spproacbm to
Caen lhe enemy a prinetpal strong-
hold repute* h**y simy panarr
and infantry emmter-attacks but treat
dispatches disclosed that enemy tanks
temporarily wedged into the Co—- ■
dis n« tsjtcr Uneo
Mmsagomery Is to Fraroe
British empire troops she reeds
contact wtth strong enemy tones near
Conde-Bw-SeuDes, US mites west of
Cara the nnwimiinM* said.
Front dispatches mid the Oermaa
; 21st panarr dreistoa was aasembti*
m the Owen regria. white the 13* SB
panarr division was moving mto peaS-
ttons w* of Bays* aad eh*to eg
the Bayeux-Ce* railway.
Gen Sir Bernard L. Montgomery,
oofnaaander of the silted exp*ri;twx-*y
force now ri “wtth hto m* m
France." another war ’ nrrsopisidoul
revealed in an undated dtepatch
The correspondent mid the shted
beachhead at that urns w* “Manter
tn rar to the Anrio besrhheeg baton
tt was extended- aad romams* »
villages, bamtets and “etoatan at
10.
Allied Craft Riddle
4 Enemy Destroyers
In Pointblank Battle
Invasion Coast
Routed From
s
.9
isre.
VOL. LV. NO. 17.
Evening Except Sunday
CITY,
SATURDAY, JUNE 10,
1944.
PRICE FIVE CENTS
fey fefffe
HOME EDITION
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11 m a m.
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15 tz
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Oklahoma City Times
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Paid Circulation Greater Than Aay Other Evening Newspaper Published in Oklahoma
TEN PAGES—500 N BROADWAY, OKLAHOMA
Allies 10 Miles From Cherbourg,
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 55, No. 17, Ed. 1 Saturday, June 10, 1944, newspaper, June 10, 1944; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1760483/m1/1/: accessed May 30, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.