Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 56, No. 21, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 14, 1945 Page: 4 of 20
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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Okinawa Loss
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CHINA
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NW.
Jsi
•n over the
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Choose from Our Large Stock'
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FOMOM
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SONS
fl
ARMSTRONG’S
ASPHALT TILE
FLOORS
Listen to Moonlight Matinee Monday evenings et 10 o’clock over WKY
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terattack. Shaded areas are Japanese controlled. (Wirephoto.)
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{OKLAHOMA TIRE A SUPPLY CO7}
F
-IMUSPB*
person*, including:
. Manpower Rules
ter motif* over rich
*129S
t
Wire Caiiiig Rack
Wire Utility Basket
■»
Set of 6
s
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Glass Canister Jar
CANAD
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HOME Supplier
4
TELEX
t
Silver-Plated FORKS
r
8-Cup Coffee Maker
Novel Cookie Jar
■(
r ♦ 4
Oak LAWN Chair
<
O-e
Thiate
—and scores of other items he
has seen and admired here.
anna and
$2»
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I
Won’t End Jap
Premier’s Rule
Tokyo Reports
First European
Planes in East
PANAMA
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Do your drinks seem
asAMFastMs?
WORLD
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P-208B: Made of rolled
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• t Dinner plates • I Matching asucera
a f Salad plates
• I Soup bowl*
• I Desserts
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■MRMfhlle
at ths horns
Chinese Offensive Pressed
Chinese troops have captured Juian (1) on the coast tn a drive to
Wenchow. The Chinese recaptured Hoyun (2), Inland, attacked
the Japanese at Sinfeng (3), losing Ishan (4) to a Japanese coun-
L
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WAMA3LB. OUAJUTTW
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P-211 A: Makes home
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with Hefa er
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FLATLUX
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Where there’s you’ll hear
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29c
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Set of 4, 19c
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WBgBADlN. Germany, June II-
(DelayeA) (0) Pen. Jaaob L Do-
von aaM Wednesday that although
the Germans had enormous guantllleo
of a naw typo of poteen ga* known as
“Green JUng in," there was no ori-
dsnoo to she* they over intended is
use gas as an offensive weapon.
Devers, who amema—»i the Math
army group on the western front, said
that tf Nltter ever had seriously can-
templated use of gas, bo was re-
strained by the German general staff.
’’■ven In Africa wo carried thou-
sands of tons of anri-gse protoettvo
equipment, but I f" ‘ “
boys from transporting
Large Supply
Of Nazi Fuel
Found Unused
P-206: Handy
size jars with
covers. Made of
clear glass.
Cleverly deco-
rated.
59c
HERE'S a HIM b Hot
Weather Skin RELIEF
If dealing nights and
Then treat your
taste to this &>>
Maonu
15*
huiOeeesR
finally stopped the
____rttng it to Italy and
them to concentrate on KB (high
explosives) and let the exoaas baggage
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hi
' AB-210: A comfortable
folding chair for porch
or lawn. Frame is
made of solid oak and
la bolted together.
Natuxal finish.
Waxed Birch Nigh Chair
P-7B3: A safely designed high
choir, with a self-locking ad-
justable pull-out tray and ad-
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waxed finish. Only
bent rash a van
__,______ m Instant cool-
ing reiiaf Mszaaaa bri W- Tbi* soothing,
medicated powder helps guard Under
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P-1 It: A well
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with top. For
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Cleverly deco-
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cated the army i
Ing on cos bold i
can nest and on JBI
tbs' Rtoing •on?'
The dev
the Tokyo
Get What You Pay Fm
In Your Hearing Aid
ONLY THE BEST
Is Good Enough for
Your Hearing!
Broken Gasoline Pipeline
Created Harbor Hasard
UN ANGUS, Juno 14y-<N» - An
esMnaCsd MAM oattOM of gaaollnr
etMhsd tote ths hMhar from a broken
i-tooh ptpo late Wednesday, creating
a haaard that caused four shipyards
OUAUTY RRM
• 5 STOWES IN OKLA. CITY •
ay 129 W. Waste
1612 N.E. 23rd
Agnew b Exchange
P-151: A cleverly designed pot-
tery jar, with a close-fitting top.
The gaoellM flowed through sewers
and stem drains tote the harbor tor
two hours before a pumper was shut
off. Coast gvartonon spraged the
Anting tM with hoses to dioMpato
the danger of fire.
Madagascar Vichyite
Arrested, French Report
NEW YORK. June 1A—(JT)—The
French prom agency reported Thurs-
day that Armand Annet, governor
general of Madagascar under the
Vichy regime, had been arrested in
Casablanca.
Annet directed his Vichy forces in
unsuccessful resistance to British
troops who occupied the Indian ocean
possession off the east coast of Africa
in the summer of 1H2 after a brief
struggle.
B-315: A depend-
able extinguish-
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action pump.
Quart size, with
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Baby Trateor Sol
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Conference Report
To Be Drafted In
Missouri Language
SAN FRANCISCO. June 14-—<XP>—
The state department is drafting in
what President Truman calls “Mis-
sorui language" a report to the na-
tion on American efforts to unite with >
other countries in a United Nations
organisation.
This document is designed to be-
come a layman’s guide on results of
the United Nations conference, as
well as a handy reference volume for
the senate when it
atlon of the charter
Submitted as a report to the presi-
dent, It will provide the state depart-
ment* official version of ths basic
principles underlying th* charter. The
document is being drafted under tbs
direction of Archibald MacLsiah, as-
sistant secretary of state.
While it will be written largely in
th* language of the man In the street,
it also will contain the American in-
trepretatlon of controvrstal charter
pointe and thus serve the senate in
the absence of official conference
minutes which may not be compiled
for some months.
GUAM, Jun* 14.— (UF) —Radio
Tokyo said Thursday that ths first
flights of Flying Fortresses and Liber-
ators from Europe have arrived in the
PhlUpptnm to join the mounting
American air offensive against Japan.
A Japanese Dome! dispatch broad-
cast by Tokyo and heard in London
reported “soom” of the four-engined
bomber* which devastated Germany
were at Philippine* bases
Though it was known that bombers
from LL Gen. James H. Doolittle's
Eighth air force were on their way
from Britain to the far east, this was
th* first report any had arrived. . It
was not confirmed by allied sources.
Tokyo also reported that two Llb-
eratora had appeared over ths Tokyo-
Yokohama area Thursday for th* fir*t
time, sending a non-atop air offensive
against Japan into its ninth straight
day. Tokyo claimed anti-aircraft guns
shot down both planes
The appearance of B-24* over cen-
tral Japan indicated they soon may be
adding their bombloads to those of
Superfortresses on Tokyo,' Some Lib-
erator* from Okinawa already have
attacked Kyushu tn southern Japan.
F5J95
BAN FRANCISCO. JUM
m Premier Kantaro taiaukl ad-
Thursday the military bee tak-
____r the nd* of the sewrtry *j*d
eeelarad he would not resign even with
the fall of Okinawa.
The Japan*** people
were instructed to BMM-------
islands "a fortrme rivaling Rabeul in
impregnability," as toe pfftofcr todi-
----and navy are depend-
I strike at th* Ameri-
man-
ry to
P-13BD. Vac-
uum type caf-
fe* maker.
. Made of ridged
clear glass.
Makes full-fla-
vored coffee the
, drip-way.
won reported by
__________aad Japaneee govern-
ment oootroUed Domel news agency to
Buzuki in a pram conference an-
nounced, his decision to remain at hl*
poet tegArtDees of the Okinawa results,
and declared the struggle there wee
not “a decisive battle which win deter-
mtoe the final outcome of this war."
A11-Military Cabinet
The disclosure that the military is
in direct control of th* government
came in an answer to a reporter's
question, Dome! said. Suzuki ex-
plained the supreme war council,
composed entirely of army and navy
department officers and ministers
"now functions virtually as a war
cabinet.'* Under the imperial decree
rule approved earlier this week by the
diet, the cabinet s decrees are the law
of the land.
Suzuki emphasised American supply
problems in invading Japan, and as-
serted th* Americans would require
months to land evan half a million
troops which would be met with
'•forces five to 10 times superior.”
Invasion Called Certain
Radio Tokyo, summing up war de-
velopments, considered the shifting of
American naval commander* and the
discussion of Lt. Gen. Joseph W. Still-
wen with other American commanders
as sure signs of invasion, either on the
north China coast or against th* am-
pin itself.
“The recent enemy air activity on
the Chin* continent point* to the next
phase of the American offensive
against Japan," Tokyo said. “At the
same time, the enemy is preparing for
a direct landing on the Japanese
mainland.”
Tokyo attempted to gain solace from
the Okinawa defeat in commenting
that despite the desperate plight of
the Nipponese force there, Lt. Oen.
Simon Bolivar Buckner, the American
commander, was the first to suffer the
"embarrassment of a formal rejection"
of an offer to accept a surrender.
Deeorat«d
with a Dutch
tfrl. Larg*
size.
• Large meat platter
• Vggttabl* dish ;• .
• Cream pitcher
• Sugar bowl A cover
to net a eheap hearing aid but
give* speech understanding and
continuing satisfaction year after
year. Write er phona.
TELEX HEARING SERVICE
eer-sM rtnsr national blbg.
ru HKastoTKtnn
from a Shop That Knows Father!
Get Ahead of the Parade
For a Port War Job
Now is th* time to bo thinking of th* future. If y*u
asrvs as bus or streetcar operator you ar* doing war-
time work that will carry on over into peacetime. If
you ar* interested and can qualify, apply at U. S.
Employment Service, 120 NW 2nd *r at 1206
Exchange avenue. Bring your statement of avail-
ability.
OKLAHOMA RAILWAY CO.
. z A. C. DeBolt---Operating Trustee
1206 Exchange Ave. Oklahoma City
OUTSIDE HOUSE PAINT;
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A tradition with Rothschild’s basement
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To Stay in Force
State U. B. employment service
lanagers were warned by Dave Van-
ivier. state WMC director. Wednea^J
lay. that "no relaxation of WMC pro^
:rams could be foreseen in the near
uttire."
Vandivier pointed out that, al-
ltough due to production cutbacks,
•nanpower shortages in some areas
ire lew critical than previously, the
need for war worker* still is acute. On
the priority list for help sre ship re-
pair yards, railroads, coal mines, food
wocessing plants and the lumber In-
dustry.
The problem ha* been reduced to
on* of local management, he said,
with the army and navy cutbacks
causing temporary unemployment in
some areas. USES managers in these
areas must work to keep down unem-
ployment as well as supply help to
remaining war plant*, he said.
Job priorities, transfers, and the 4*-
hour week will not relax, Vandivier
added.
Indefinite Increase
In Whisky Output Seen
WASHINGTON, June 14.— VP) —
Limited output of whisky and other
beverage alcohol may be authorized
todefinitely after July * unrestricted ■
production.
Announcing this Wednesday night, ’
the war production board said the ____ _
war alcohol stockpile by year's end
will be about 103,600,000 gallons, and---—•” -
added:
“Inasmuch as approximately 60.000,•
000 gallons prorides an adequate
stockpile In view of requirements, over
40,000.000 gallons could be released
from industrial alcohol production if
the estimated requirement* do not in-
crease.’'
The proposal did not take into ac-
count a possibility that use of corn
for alcohol may be restricted.
P-11SE: Distinctive new dinnerwar* pat-
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ivory grounds. Some
plain, other* gold
banded. Complete 53-
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ga," Dew* aaM. "X told them to grt
all the KB aarae* thay eouM. Fotemi
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On* ahMdaal warfare sipart aaM
tharo ware twe ocoaatona when the
German* could hava uaad ga* with
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other at the Bamagen bridgshsad
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/
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<>
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 56, No. 21, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 14, 1945, newspaper, June 14, 1945; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1760799/m1/4/?rotate=270: accessed July 16, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.